Adopt An Acre

You can be a hero for the earth and start saving nature today! Through our Adopt an Acre® program your contribution goes directly to the purchase and protection of the critical habitats of endangered animals, plants and ecosystems.

 

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Six Sites to Save!

When you Adopt an Acre today, you will help protect dense forests, lush wetlands, expansive deserts, and the thousands of species of plants and animals that call these habitats home. Best of all, you'll get the satisfaction of knowing you're helping to protect these extraordinary wild habitats!

With each donation, you will receive a personalized deed with your name or you can make the donation in someone elses name.

With each donation, you will receive a personalized deed with a printed name of your choice. These deeds make the perfect gifts for friends or loved ones!

 

Guanacaste
Conservation
Area, Costa Rica

Guanacaste contains roughly 2.4% of the world's terrestrial biodiversity, or 60% of the species that occur in Costa Rica. The Guanacaste Conservation Area is about 56 miles long, stretching 10 miles into the Pacific Ocean from below sea level to 6,286 feet, providing movement for animals and plants with the onset of global climate change.

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Osa Peninsula,
Corcovado National
Park, Costa Rica

Located in the southwestern corner of Costa Rica, the Osa Peninsula is home to jaguars, pumas, tapirs, anteaters, at least 375 bird species, 6,000 insect species, and more than 3,000 documented plant species. Off the coast in the Pacific, humpback whales and dolphins raise their young among populations of green, leatherback, hawksbill, and olive ridley sea turtles.

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Pantanal
National Park,
Brazil

Brazil's Pantanal is one of the world's largest freshwater wetlands. Millions of waterfowl breed along the Pantanal National Park rivers and lagoons. Dense populations of jaguars, capybara, hyacinth macaws, roseatte spoonbills, jabiru storks, kingfishers, rheas, magnificent Tababeuia trees and others thrive in its forest and grasslands.

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Chagres
National Park,
Panama

The Chagres region harbors many species native to Panama and represents the northernmost range of several South American mammal, bird, and reptile species. Chagres is particularly important to neotropical migratory birds such as raptors, songbirds, and waterfowl. Endangered species such as the harpy eagle and jaguar find refuge within the watershed of the Chagres River.

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Kunene
Region Protected
Area, Namibia

The country of Namibia possesses rare qualities which makes it an ideal location for conservation. With the world's second lowest human population density, the Kunene Region desert hosts some of the largest free-ranging population of desert adapted black rhino. The Kunene Region Protected Area lies between two important conservation sites - Etosha National Park and Skeleton Coast National Park.

 
 
 
 

Berau Forest,
East Kalimantan,
Borneo

SaveNature.Org is working in East Kalimantan, a province on the east coast of Borneo. Conservation efforts are focused in the Berau Forest, an area within East Kalimantan which spans 2.2 million acres, 75 percent of which is covered by forest and home to at least 2,500 Bornean orangutans. Scientists estimate that Berau contains roughly 10% of the world's remaining wild orangutans.

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