National Wildlife Humane Society

National Wildlife Humane Society A world without wildlife is a world not fit for humans. NWHS http://www.humanewildlife.org

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis Trust, Kenya, Africa "Fun and games operating “man’s creations” in remote...
05/08/2026

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis Trust, Kenya, Africa "Fun and games operating “man’s creations” in remote Northern Kenya!" Open to read and view awesome photos

As you probably know the Milgis operates a dam team, and implemented and maintains 14 solar water projects.. When one of these very intricate machines gives a small noise thats not right or stops w…

An Indian billionaire’s son offered on Tuesday to take hippos descended from those introduced to Colombia by drug kingpi...
04/29/2026

An Indian billionaire’s son offered on Tuesday to take hippos descended from those introduced to Colombia by drug kingpin Pablo Escobar, rather than have the animals killed.
Anant Ambani, the son of tycoon Mukesh Ambani, said he had formally requested the Colombian government to stay a decision to kill the animals, which have wreaked havoc on rivers in the South American nation.
Instead, he has asked to allow the “safe, scientifically-led translocation that would bring the 80 animals to a permanent home” at his Vantara animal centre.
The vast zoo in India’s western state of Gujarat bills itself as the “one of the world’s largest wildlife rescue, care and conservation centres”.

Anant Ambani says he has submitted a detailed plan to give the animals a new home at his Vantara animal centre.

Species thought extinct for thousands of years, ‘rediscovered’ thanks to Indigenous knowledgeOn a remote peninsula in In...
04/26/2026

Species thought extinct for thousands of years, ‘rediscovered’ thanks to Indigenous knowledge
On a remote peninsula in Indonesian Papua, a species long thought extinct by scientists has been confirmed to survive. The evidence did not come from a formal survey. It began with conversations with Tambrauw elders, who described a forest glider they had known for generations. Their accounts, combined with earlier photographs, led researchers to verify the continued existence of the ring-tailed glider, reports John Cannon.

It started with a set of photographs, taken of an animal captured in 2015 on the Bird’s Head Peninsula in Indonesian Papua, the western half of the island of New Guinea. The smallish animal with “large hands” looked a bit like a slow loris, a small primate that doesn’t live on the island, or...

Earth Day
04/22/2026

Earth Day

Decades after poaching drove them extinct, rhinos are back in the wild in Uganda
04/22/2026

Decades after poaching drove them extinct, rhinos are back in the wild in Uganda

Forty-three years after the last free-ranging rhinos were seen in the country, the Uganda Wildlife Authority has welcomed four southern white rhinos to Kidepo Valley National Park, in the country’s north, from a breeding sanctuary designed for the species’ reintroduction. “We are glad and priv...

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate link here and in the 1st reply, that goe...
04/10/2026

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate link here and in the 1st reply, that goes straight to Paypal. Anything helps! --- https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/Z3U9GSSTY8ZDE
One disaster after another.. too sad..
I feel we’ve had too many sadnesses this last 3 months.. some because of financial restraints AND this is again a ‘begging’ letter for whoever may be able to help or to put us into the right direction…. PLEASE, PLEASE…
Just some of the wildlife and environmental disasters from lately.. AND WHAT HAVE WE MANAGED TO DO TO HELP!!

I feel we’ve had too many sadnesses this last 3 months.. some because of financial restraints AND this is again a ‘begging’ letter for whoever may beable to help or to put us into…

THANK YOU to YOU ALL and to the FORESTS…Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate ...
04/08/2026

THANK YOU to YOU ALL and to the FORESTS…
Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate link here and in the 1st reply, that goes straight to Paypal. Anything helps! --- https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/Z3U9GSSTY8ZDE
"On ‘world forest day’ 21st March all our rangers were sent off to climb up, up, up into their forests.. Mt Nyiru, Ndoto Mountain and Lenkiyou range, to celebrate such an important day!… I told them ” Go up and thank the trees for being there”…. Go up and appreciate what these amazing natural beauties give to us.. They loved it.."
Amazing Photos!!!
https://milgistrust.wordpress.com/2026/04/04/thank-you-to-you-all-and-to-the-forests/

On ‘world forest day’ 21st March all our rangers were sent off to climb up, up, up into their forests.. Mt Nyiru, Ndoto Mountain and Lenkiyou range, to celebrate such an important day!&…

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate link here and in the 1st reply, that goe...
03/09/2026

Helen Douglas-Dufresne reports from The Milgis, Kenya Africa (there is a donate link here and in the 1st reply, that goes straight to Paypal. Anything helps! --- https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/Z3U9GSSTY8ZDE
One disaster after another.. too sad..
I feel we’ve had too many sadnesses this last 3 months.. some because of financial restraints AND this is again a ‘begging’ letter for whoever may be able to help or to put us into the right direction…. PLEASE, PLEASE…
Just some of the wildlife and environmental disasters from lately.. AND WHAT HAVE WE MANAGED TO DO TO HELP!!
https://milgistrust.wordpress.com/2026/03/05/one-disaster-after-another-too-sad/

I feel we’ve had too many sadnesses this last 3 months.. some because of financial restraints AND this is again a ‘begging’ letter for whoever may beable to help or to put us into…

Giant tortoises return to Galápagos island 180 years after relatives went extinct/ By Bobby Bascomb /For the first time ...
02/23/2026

Giant tortoises return to Galápagos island 180 years after relatives went extinct
/ By Bobby Bascomb /
For the first time in nearly two centuries, giant tortoises are once again roaming Floreana Island in the Galápagos, a conservation milestone more
than a decade in the making.
Early settlers on Floreana Island altered the landscape and hunted the Floreana giant tortoise (Chelonoidis niger niger) into extinction about 180 years ago. But while working on Wolf Volcano, roughly 180 kilometers (112 miles) away on Isabela Island, researchers with the Galápagos Conservancy noticed something unexpected. “The tortoises seemed different,” Penny Becker, CEO of Island Conservation told Mongabay in a video call. “They looked different and they were behaving differently.”
So, the researchers took DNA samples from those tortoises and compared them with DNA from tortoise bones found in caves on Floreana. “Indeed, there were some pretty strong genetics left in the Wolf [Volcano] population from tortoises that were here on Floreana,” Becker said.
How the heavy terrestrial reptiles got to Wolf Volcano remains uncertain.
They could have floated on ocean currents or been transported by haling ships that kept tortoises for food.
In any case, scientists launched a breeding program using the Wolf Volcano tortoises to establish a new hybrid population for reintroduction
to Floreana. On Feb. 20, with support from local residents and a consortium of partners, 156 endangered tortoises were released. Each of
them is between 10 and 13 years old. They will reach sexual maturity at only 25 years old, so building a self-sustaining population will take time.
Becker is confident in the project’s long-term success. The tortoises’ health and progress toward adaptation on the island will be closely monitored. “We’re going to adaptively manage things as we go along to ensure that it’s successful.”
Tortoises are a keystone species and critical ecosystem engineers. Their impacts on the island could be transformative.
“By dispersing seeds, shaping vegetation, creating micro-habitats such as their well-known wallows, and influencing how landscapes regenerate, they help rebuild ecological processes that many other species depend on,” Rakan Zahawi, Charles Darwin Foundation executive director, said in a press release. Their return is expected to improve seabird nesting habitats, for example. More seabirds mean more nutrients flowing between land and sea, enhancing the so-called “circular seabird economy” that can improve fisheries productivity and coral reef health.
The tortoise reintroduction is part of a much broader restoration effort on Floreana. In 2025 following a successful rat eradication program, the Galápagos rail (Laterallus spilonota), a small ground bird, returned to the island after 190 years. The team is also working on plans to reintroduce several other extirpated species, including the vegetarian finch (Platyspiza crassirostris), one of Darwin’s finches that gave rise to his theory of evolution.
“Seeing giant tortoises return to Floreana confirms that long-term commitment and collective action can restore ecosystems that once seemed lost,” Eliécer Cruz, director of Fundación Jocotoco’s Galápagos Program, said in a press release.

Giant tortoises return to Galápagos island 180 years after relatives went extinct

/ By Bobby Bascomb /

For the first time in nearly two centuries, giant tortoises are once again roaming Floreana Island in the Galápagos, a conservation milestone more than a decade in the making.

Early settlers on Floreana Island altered the landscape and hunted the Floreana giant tortoise (Chelonoidis niger niger) into extinction about 180 years ago. But while working on Wolf Volcano, roughly 180 kilometers (112 miles) away on Isabela Island, researchers with the Galápagos Conservancy noticed something unexpected.

“The tortoises seemed different,” Penny Becker, CEO of Island Conservation told Mongabay in a video call. “They looked different and they were behaving differently.”

So, the researchers took DNA samples from those tortoises and compared them with DNA from tortoise bones found in caves on Floreana. “Indeed, there were some pretty strong genetics left in the Wolf [Volcano] population from tortoises that were here on Floreana,” Becker said.

How the heavy terrestrial reptiles got to Wolf Volcano remains uncertain. They could have floated on ocean currents or been transported by whaling ships that kept tortoises for food.

In any case, scientists launched a breeding program using the Wolf Volcano tortoises to establish a new hybrid population for reintroduction to Floreana. On Feb. 20, with support from local residents and a consortium of partners, 156 endangered tortoises were released. Each of them is between 10 and 13 years old. They will reach sexual maturity at roughly 25 years old, so building a self-sustaining population will take time.

Becker is confident in the project’s long-term success. The tortoises’ health and progress toward adaptation on the island will be closely monitored. “We’re going to adaptively manage things as we go along to ensure that it’s successful.”

Tortoises are a keystone species and critical ecosystem engineers. Their impacts on the island could be transformative.

“By dispersing seeds, shaping vegetation, creating micro-habitats such as their well-known wallows, and influencing how landscapes regenerate, they help rebuild ecological processes that many other species depend on,” Rakan Zahawi, Charles Darwin Foundation executive director, said in a press release.

Their return is expected to improve seabird nesting habitats, for example. More seabirds mean more nutrients flowing between land and sea, enhancing the so-called “circular seabird economy” that can improve fisheries productivity and coral reef health.

The tortoise reintroduction is part of a much broader restoration effort on Floreana. In 2025 following a successful rat eradication program, the Galápagos rail (Laterallus spilonota), a small ground bird, returned to the island after 190 years. The team is also working on plans to reintroduce several other extirpated species, including the vegetarian finch (Platyspiza crassirostris), one of Darwin’s finches that gave rise to his theory of evolution.

“Seeing giant tortoises return to Floreana confirms that long-term commitment and collective action can restore ecosystems that once seemed lost,” Eliécer Cruz, director of Fundación Jocotoco’s Galápagos Program, said in a press release.

Helicopter translocation brings isolated banteng to safer grounds in Cambodia/ By Carolyn Cowan /Earlier this month in n...
02/19/2026

Helicopter translocation brings isolated banteng to safer grounds in Cambodia
/ By Carolyn Cowan /
Earlier this month in northeastern Cambodia, conservationists deployed helicopters, trucks and more than 50 personnel to translocate a group of critically endangered banteng into a protected reserve.
Banteng, a type of wild cattle that once roamed widely across Southeast Asia, have suffered crippling population declines due to hunting and deforestation.
The effort is part of wider plans to secure a future for the species in Cambodia while rewilding Siem Pang Wildlife Sanctuary, a site that experts say is one of Cambodia’s best protected sites.
Against the backdrop of intense forest loss, even within protected areas, experts say translocation of isolated animals away from frontiers of development could offer a viable future for conservation in Cambodia.
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