Pantomime are currently an endangered species and need our help. They are only endangered due to human activty , and can now only be saved with human intervention.
WWF
WWF, together with TRAFFIC, is working in Asia and Africa to protect pangolins and other species from wildlife crime. They are actively trying to reduce the demand for illegal wildlife products in countries like China and Vietnam. Also helping governments mount a strong defense against the poaching crisis. And WWF is lobbying for strong national laws and stronger enforcement to ensure that wildlife crime does not pay. To help reduce the trade in pangolin products online, WWF and TRAFFIC co-convene the Coalition to End Wildlife Trafficking Online along with conservation organization IFAW and nearly 50 global tech companies to identify and block illegal listings.
Born free
Your adoption will help Born Free care for orphaned and injured pangolins rescued by the Sangha Pangolin Project in Centra African Republic, as well as helping to fund our work to campaign against the illegal wildlife trade and protect their natural habitat.
Flora and Forna
At Fauna & Flora we are working to protect the remaining pangolin populations – either directly or indirectly – at many of our project sites in Africa and Asia.
As part of our increased efforts to protect pangolins across our project sites in Africa, Fauna & Flora and our partners are not only gathering crucial data on trade and consumption, but also carrying out biomonitoring activities to detect the presence of these animals and track their movements in the wild, in order to learn more about them. Our work ranges from pangolin tagging in Liberia and Guinea to camera-trap surveys in South Sudan and the development of a national action plan for pangolins in Kenya.
In Southeast Asia, Fauna & Flora is helping to reduce poaching and trafficking of Sunda pangolins from Sumatra’s Kerinci Seblat National Park, thanks to our long-running work to protect Sumatran tigers with our local partners in Indonesia; the international wildlife trade gangs involved in tiger poaching are often the same people who target pangolins. Disrupting these networks saves pangolin as well as tigers. Elsewhere in Asia, our illegal wildlife trade programme is protecting pangolins in Myanmar, Cambodia and Vietnam.