Solutions
Pathways for restoration and resilience, each linked to the threats it addresses and the species and ecosystems it supports.
Legally protecting forest from conversion.
Helping degraded forest grow back.
Removing deforestation from commodity supply chains.
Enforcing laws against illegal clearing and mining.
Satellite and field monitoring to detect forest loss.
Legally safeguarding the land a species needs.
Connected strips of habitat that let animals move safely between areas.
Indigenous peoples managing and protecting their own territories.
Helping farmers protect livestock so wildlife isn't killed in return.
Patrols and laws that stop illegal killing.
Tracking populations so decisions are based on real data.
Actively running parks and reserves so they work.
Rebuilding the fish and prey populations predators rely on.
Ocean zones where harmful activity is limited or banned.
Rules on where and how fast boats can travel.
Quieter ship technology and traffic management.
Phasing out and cleaning up harmful chemicals.
Managing fishing to cut bycatch and protect prey.
Tracking populations so gaps in data can be closed and trends caught early.
Ending the capture and display of wild animals.
Local communities benefiting from and helping protect nearby wildlife.
Planning land use so wildlife keeps the space and routes it needs.
Safeguarding the water sources wildlife depends on in dry seasons.
Cutting greenhouse-gas emissions — the only thing that addresses the root of sea-ice loss and climate pressures.
Cutting and better-targeting farm chemicals that harm pollinators.
Restoring wildflowers, hedgerows and margins for pollinators to feed.
Mixed crops and flowering plants instead of single-crop fields.
Managing parasites and disease to keep colonies healthy.