Tag: defenders of wildlife

Help Protect Ecosystem Engineers

Help protect Gopher Tortoises – adorable ecosystem engineers and a keystone species – by taking action today.

Video Transcript:

Gopher Tortoises aren’t just cute – they’re also keystone species that play a vital role in their natural ecosystem.

By digging large, deep burrows to escape extreme temperatures and predators, they’re also providing shelter to over 350 other species of mammals, reptiles, amphibians, insects, and even birds.

Unfortunately, Gopher Tortoises are increasingly threatened by habitat loss, roadkill, predation, climate change and continue to be illegally harvested by people.

Defenders of Wildlife and partners are working to reverse this habitat loss and … Continue

Monitoring For Golden-Cheeked Warblers

Follow along with our Texas representative, Azalia Rodriguez, and partners as they monitor for the endangered Golden-Cheeked Warbler before it migrates south for the winter. Learn more at:

https://defenders.org/wildlife/golden-cheeked-warbler

Video Transcript:

Hi. I’m Azalia Rodriguez, Texas representative for Defenders of Wildlife. And today we’re out here at Balcones Canyonlands Preserve in Austin, Texas. I’m with forest ecologists and a senior biologist. And we’re doing a walkabout and potentially observing and monitoring some Golden-Cheeked Warblers.

Named for the bright yellow markings on the bird’s head, the Golden-Cheeked Warbler is a neotropical migratory songbird. It breeds and raises its young in the … Continue

Celebrating Access To Nature

Video By: Defenders of Wildlife

Join Cherie Wasoff, our Director of Philanthropy, and our partner Hispanic Access Foundation in celebrating Latino Conservation Week and the introduction of legislation to establish the Western Riverside National Wildlife Refuge in one of the fastest growing counties in the nation – southern California’s Riverside County.

If enacted, this refuge would provide access to nature for millions of Californians in the densely populated area, protecting thousands of acres for iconic wildlife species, dozens of which are threatened or endangered, and conserving habitat connectivity.  

Footage by: CBCOM

Video Transcript:

Cherie Wasoff:

One of the reasons it’s … Continue