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  • Your Perfect Tree

    Your Perfect Tree

    CWF wants to help you deck the halls…sustainably. Read on and we’ll land you your perfect Christmas tree!

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  • Are We Stressing Out Our Lakes?

    2013-05-09

    Summer’s just around the corner. Learn what you can do now to create a watery wonderland at the cottage.

  • A Taste of Things to Come

    2016-01-19

    Driven by their appetite, some animals will use their ability to think ahead to scout out their next meal.

  • Batty About Bats

    2025-12-05

    Bats have been maligned for centuries, miscast as the familiars of witches, associated with Hallowe'en, and feared for the false belief that they will get caught in your hair. In reality, bats are incredibly important to the health of the environment and our gardens.

  • Beating the Heat

    2025-12-05

    When our blood begins to boil under the blazing summer sun, we go to all sorts of lengths to chill out, from taking a dip in a pool to standing in front of the open fridge door. But we aren’t the only ones that need to beat the heat. Animals feel it, too, and though they don’t have a neighbour’s pool for refreshment, they’ve come up with some pretty cool methods of their own. 

  • Bumblebees in a Bind

    2015-09-09

    Pollinators have been battling habitat loss and pesticides for some time now, but it turns out bumblebees may be facing the greatest threat of all

  • Bun in the Oven

    2014-05-16

    What makes human pregnancy different from our wild friends’? In some cases, not much…

  • Burn Brightly, Burn Cleanly

    2025-12-05

    Stay Warm This Winter—Guilt Free.

  • Canada and Climate Change: On Thin Ice

    2025-12-05

    By Leigh Edgar</p> <p>Once a leader in the fight against climate change, the government of Canada is now lagging behind other developed nations in its efforts to meaningfully address greenhouse gas emissions. And instead of trying to improve its own record, Canada wants to point the finger at other nations instead. <br>&nbsp;

  • Canada’s Lost Species

    2025-12-05

    By Leigh Edgar</P> <P>Extinction isn't exclusive to species on remote tropical islands, or in the lush rainforests of South America. You might be surprised to learn that we’ve lost species in our own country. While the rates and causes of extinction in developed countries differ from those in developing countries, nations like Canada certainly aren't immune to species loss. Species that have gone extinct in Canada largely fell victim to a time when land was being conquered for human settlement, natural resources were being overharvested, and few – if any – conservation laws existed.</P> <P>&nbsp;

  • Canada’s Navigable Waters Protection Act

    2025-12-05

    Pushing to amend Canada’s Navigable Waters Protection Act to strengthen and conserve environmental protection of Canadian waters.&nbsp;&nbsp;

  • Canadian Wildlife Federation Articles

    2025-12-05

    News&nbsp;from CWF including past partnerships, promotions and scholarships. &nbsp;

  • Canadian Wildlife That Influenced Canada

    2025-12-05

    Let's celebrate how wildlife has impacted Canadian history and culture

  • Cannibalized Cubs

    2025-12-05

    Shrinking and late-forming ice is forcing the polar bears of Churchill, Man., to adopt drastic hunting measures. “There’s nothing much to eat along the Hudson Bay coast in the fall other than other bears,” says biologist Ian Stirling, a retired Environment Canada scientist and leading expert on polar bears.

  • Can We Save the Bobolink?

    2018-05-14

    Nesting is not so easy for this prairie songbird

  • Can’t See the Forest for the TVs

    2025-12-05

    Even though it’s still making headlines, it shouldn’t be news to anyone&nbsp;— kids today are spending too much time inside and not enough time in nature. A recent U.K. study conducted by the National Trust showed that of the 1,651 children surveyed, only half could tell the difference between a bee and a wasp but 90 per cent could identify Yoda. This study focused on U.K. children, but would Canadian kids fare any better? If we can be compared to our neighbours to the south&nbsp;— who have studied this growing disconnect in detail&nbsp;— the answer is no.&nbsp;&nbsp;

  • Carbon Trading Revenues Represent Important Funding for Wildlife

    2025-12-05

    CWF encourages Canadians to add their voices to the call for allocation of carbon market revenues to conservation.&nbsp;

  • Catch of the Day Part Two

    2013-03-21

    Last time we talked about the fishing technique called purse seining – one of the most common means of catching fish in the pelagic (surface and sub-surface) zones of the ocean.

  • Catharine Parr Traill

    2025-12-05

    <strong>By April Overall</strong></p> <p>A tribute to Canada’s floral godmother