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🧊 BREAKING NEWS: Harp Seals Now “Near Threatened” 🦭💔

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On October 10th 2025, the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) officially downgraded the Harp Seal ( Pagophilus groenlandicus ) from “Least Concern” to “Near Threatened.” 👉 Read the full IUCN announcement here This tragic change confirms what conservationists have been warning for years: the harp seal is heading towards serious trouble. Melting ice caused by climate change is destroying the nurseries where mothers give birth and raise their pups — and the commercial seal hunt continues to kill tens thousands of defenseless seals each year. For me, this isn’t just another update on a chart. It’s a heartbreaking reminder that the animals I’ve been fighting for — since I was just 11 years old — are finally being recognized as vulnerable . But we can no longer let this stop at just awareness. It needs to now lead to action. Through Voice for Voiceless: Seal The Future , I hope to continue fighting to protect these beautiful creatures, raise awareness, and urge co...

A World-First for Koalas

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🚨 BREAKING: A WORLD FIRST FOR KOALAS Australia has just taken a historic step for wildlife conservation — the approval of the first-ever vaccine to protect koalas from chlamydia , a disease that has been silently wiping out populations for decades. 🐨💔 If you’ve ever seen a koala, you know how calm, gentle, and vulnerable they can seem. Yet, behind those sleepy eyes, so many have been suffering. Chlamydia in koalas isn’t just uncomfortable — it can lead to blindness, infertility, urinary tract disease, and death . In some areas, infection rates have reached up to 90% , making it one of the greatest threats these animals face, alongside habitat loss and climate change. Now, after more than ten years of research and trials, scientists have finally created a solution. This single-dose vaccine is projected to: Reduce deaths by up to 65% Prevent infertility, one of the biggest reasons for population decline Even reverse some symptoms in already-infected koalas That means not o...

Colossal announces plan to resurrect long-gone Giant Moa from New-Zealand

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In a move stirring both scientific fascination and ethical debate, Colossal Biosciences—known for its (sometimes controversial) “de‑extinction” work—is teaming up with filmmaker Sir Peter Jackson and New Zealand's Ngāi Tahu people in a high‑profile bid to bring back the giant moa. Standing up to 3.6 m (12 ft) tall, these flightless birds were driven extinct around the 15th century by over‑hunting. The newly announced initiative aims to reconstruct a moa‑like bird using cutting‑edge gene‑editing and surrogate incubation techniques. 🧬 Background Colossal has already attracted global attention with its dire wolf and woolly mammoth programs. In early July 2025, the company revealed: Sir Peter Jackson and his wife Fran Walsh invested US $15 million , and Jackson contributed a collection of approximately 400 moa bones . The project is a collaboration with the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre to ensure cultural sensitivity and ecological awareness. The plan: extract ancient DNA from bone fragm...

Another Step Forward For Seals

 ✍️ Two Weeks, One Letter, and a Voice for the Seals For the past two weeks, my world has been wrapped up in one thing: writing a letter. Not just any letter, but the most important one I’ve ever written — addressed to the Prime Minister of Canada about the commercial seal hunt. I spent day after day shaping sentences, rewriting paragraphs, and trying to make sure every word carried both truth and compassion. It wasn’t homework or a school project. It was something I chose to do because I couldn’t ignore the images in my head — the seals on the ice, being shot from boats and having no clue why their friends suddenly collapsed and slid into the deepness of the ocean. All this pain has been hidden behind the label of “tradition.” Some nights I stayed up late, asking myself: Will anyone even listen? Will these seals get to bleed out and die in silence on the bottom of the ocean, forever?  But each time I doubted, I thought of the seals who don’t get to choose. Who can’t send l...

BREAKING: EU Court Aims To End Bottom Trawling in MPA's

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  EU Court Upholds Protections Against Bottom Trawling in Marine Protected Areas In a significant victory for marine conservation, the General Court of the European Union has upheld the European Commission's decision to implement stricter protections against bottom trawling in Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). This ruling confirms that member states have the authority to enforce measures banning destructive fishing practices in vulnerable marine ecosystems. Bottom trawling is the most destructive fishing method on earth. It's a method that uses a net smashing its way across the seabed and destroying everything in its path. The fishermen are often on the hunt for just a single species and therefore, 75% of the catch is usually wasted and thrown back into sea. It's hard to think of a more wasteful way to catch fish... Background The case originated when Germany and the Netherlands requested the European Commission to amend a 2017 regulation to introduce stronger protections in t...

Koala Culling Sparks Outrage in Australia

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  Koala Cull Sparks Outrage in Victoria: Conservationists Demand Humane Alternatives A controversial koala culling operation in Victoria, Australia, has ignited public outcry and renewed debate over wildlife management practices. Reports indicate that helicopters have been deployed to euthanize koalas in the state's southwest, a method typically reserved for controlling populations of invasive species like deer and brumbies. ​ The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) asserts that the cull targets koalas in "very poor condition" due to overpopulation and habitat degradation. However, animal welfare advocates argue that the root cause is not an overabundance of koalas but rather insufficient habitat management and food scarcity.​ More than 700 koalas are believed to have already been killed, while officials argue this is necessary to prevent the koalas from starving due to habitat loss, stating they were severely injured and distressed. Bushfires fro...

Voice for the Voiceless: Protecting Harp Seals from the Commercial Hunt

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At WildlifeoPedia, our mission is simple but powerful: to give a voice to animals who cannot speak for themselves. One of the most urgent causes we champion today is the protection of harp seals, especially from the ongoing Canadian commercial seal hunt. Harp seals are incredible creatures. Born with fluffy white fur to hide on ice and snow, these pups are vulnerable from the very first days of life. Their mothers leave them after just 12 days, and the pups must survive on their own. They grow into remarkable swimmers, diving over 270 meters deep and reaching speeds of up to 27 kilometers per hour. Their striking silver coats, marked like a harp, and their big, expressive eyes make them truly unforgettable animals. Yet despite their resilience, harp seals face serious threats. Climate change is melting the sea ice they depend on for resting and raising their young, leading to drowning or starvation for many pups. Pollution, oil spills, and entanglement in fishing gear further endanger ...