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  • Endangered Species & Biodiversity

Product of Canada: The Wild Side of Our Home and Native Land

  • March 17, 2025
  • by Acacia Frempong-Manso
When people think of Canada’s wildlife, moose, beavers, and loons usually take centre stage. But what about the species that only exist in Canada, the true “Products of Canada” in…
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  • 4
  • Coasts & Oceans
  • Connecting With Nature
  • Education & Leadership
  • Forests & Fields
  • Lakes & Rivers

How to Help Eastern Bluebirds on Your Property

  • March 10, 2025
  • by Mikaela Capeling
Tips to Bring the ‘Bluebird of Happiness’ to Your Backyard This Spring Brilliant royal blue mixed with rusty red and brown make the Eastern Bluebird a beautiful sight, no matter…
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  • 3
  • Coasts & Oceans
  • Connecting With Nature
  • Education & Leadership
  • Endangered Species & Biodiversity
  • Forests & Fields
  • Lakes & Rivers

Healing Your City and Sanity With Gardening

  • March 10, 2025
  • by April Overall
How to fight climate change, battle biodiversity loss and help your mental health with urban gardening Cities are under the strain of relentless heat, pollution and concrete jungles. But there’s…
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american eel @ sean landsman
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  • 3
  • Endangered Species & Biodiversity
  • Lakes & Rivers

Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge Could Help Save the American Eel

  • February 28, 2025
  • by Andrew Cooper
The American Eel — known as kichisippi pimisi in Algonquin and tyawerón:ko in Mohawk — is an incredibly important species not only ecologically but also culturally. They have been in decline for…
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  • 2
  • Connecting With Nature

Six Ways to Welcome Owls to Your Backyard

  • February 3, 2025
  • by April Overall
Canada is home to 16 species of owls. Not only are these wide-eyed wonders mesmerizing to watch, they also are also natural pest controllers, preying on rodents, rabbits and insects.…
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  • 3
  • Connecting With Nature

Redrawing the Arctic’s Wildlife Map

  • February 3, 2025
  • by Mikaela Capeling
New Species Rewrite the Tundra’s Story Beavers in the Arctic? That’s right, you read it correctly. When you picture the Arctic, what comes to mind? Snow, ice, frigid temperatures, and…
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  • 8
  • Connecting With Nature

Winners of the 2024 Reflections of Nature Photo Contest

  • January 6, 2025
  • by CWF
The Canadian Wildlife Federation is proud to celebrate 25 photographers from coast to coast for their stunning images showcasing the beauty of Canada’s wildlife. This year, we received a record-shattering…
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  • 3
  • Forests & Fields

Energy Can Be Renewable, Grasslands Less So

  • December 12, 2024
  • by John Wilmshurst
There once was more than 53 million hectares of natural grasslands in Canada. The plow, roads and cities have reduced this to about 10 million hectares — about an 81…
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@ Dever Villeneuve
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  • Connecting With Nature

Education and Science Combine to Improve Our Wildlife Families

  • December 11, 2024
  • by CWF
In the space where science and education meet, real progress is being made to help Canada’s wildlife. The Canadian Wildlife Federation is implementing evidence-based science and education solutions that are…
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  • 3
  • Connecting With Nature

Do Animals Laugh?

  • December 9, 2024
  • by Jerika Bradford
How laughter connects us across species The giggles, the wheezing, the tears, the silent-buckled-over-cackles, the hold-on-to-your-bladder for dear life – these are all signs you’ve been exposed to a contagious…
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