As COP15 approaches, we can’t afford to lose our momentum or our resolve in our fight to conserve species biodiversity
As global leaders prepare for the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP 15) in Montreal this December, the conservation community is rallying to change how nature is prioritized in policy and in public investments. There’s still time to save one million of the planet’s plants and animals from extinction—but the clock is ticking.
What’s threatening global biodiversity? A variety of primarily human-driven factors impact wildlife species, including habitat loss and degradation, pollution, species over-exploitation, climate change, and invasive species and disease.
Saving species for biodiversity — Ducks Unlimited Canada
As global leaders prepare for the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP 15) in Montreal this December, the conservation community is rallying to change how nature is prioritized in policy and in public investments. There’s still time to save one million of the planet’s plants and animals from extinction—but the clock is ticking.
What’s threatening global biodiversity? A variety of primarily human-driven factors impact wildlife species, including habitat loss and degradation, pollution, species over-exploitation, climate change, and invasive species and disease.
Saving species for biodiversity — Ducks Unlimited Canada