Fill your world with wildlife. By becoming a Zoo member, you’re also helping us to protect the natural world for the generations to come by supporting our vital conservation work. Find out more about ...
Hands on in the field and behind the scenes, we’ve worked to protect and support the recovery of the pygmy hippo found in the threatened Upper Guinea forest hotspot of West Africa. Logging, mining and ...
From uncovering their secret breeding grounds to making 189 hectares of habitat accessible with eel ladders, together with our partners we're restoring Critically Endangered European eels across the ...
Join us this October for this year’s ZSL Zoos and Conservation Careers Conference – the perfect event for anyone looking to pursue an animal related career. Bringing together speakers from across ...
ZSL - The Zoological Society of London - is a global science-led conservation organisation helping people and wildlife live better together to restore the wonder and diversity of life everywhere.
The illegal wildlife trade is the fourth biggest illegal activity worldwide, behind only arms, drugs and human trafficking, and is often run by the same criminal syndicates. It's worth around $23 ...
ZSL looks to protect rare and threatened native birds and to improve the health of their populations. Many of the UK’s species have been in decline, and are in need of conservation attention. We’re ...
Making a difference for wildlife. At ZSL, we are proud of the work we do. To give you an insight into the work our conservationists, scientists, and volunteers achieve on a daily, weekly and monthly ...
Mongolia is a vast expanse of unique habitats, from the taiga forest in the north, through to the desert steppe in the centre, to the wilderness of the Gobi Desert in the south. These habitats are ...
We're ZSL - an international conservation charity driven by science, working to restore wildlife in the UK and around the world by protecting critical species, restoring ecosystems, helping people and ...
The pygmy three-toed sloth was only described scientifically in 2001 and is Critically Endangered. Sloths used to be elephant-sized giants that roamed the earth alongside other prehistoric animals.
Human activity is pushing our precious planet to its limit, threatening the critical systems that support habitats, ways of life and our future. Using data compiled in the Living Planet Index (LPI) by ...