Animals > Wwf_adoption
Adopt an animal
An Animal Adoption with the WWF is a fantastic gift, not just for the person receiving the gift, but for the animals and the planet too!
You can place your order now and print off an adoption certificate to give to the recipient in advance of their adoption pack arriving in the post.
This printed certificate will tell your loved one what you've bought them and all about the Adoption Pack they will be getting in post soon!
Click here to visit the WWF and adopt an animal and then return here to print-off your certificate.
Generate a certificate
WWF-UK are a registered charity - charity no. 1081247.
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Adopt an Orangutan
Orang-utans are now found only on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. Habitat destruction and fragmentation - caused by commercial logging and clearance for oil palm plantations and agriculture - are by far the greatest threats that these amazing creatures face. If the current rate of deforestation continues, Borneo could lose most of its lowland forests in less than ten years.
Read more about adopting an orangutan with the WWF...
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Adopt a Dolphin
Bottlenose dolphins are wild, intelligent and inquisitive mammals. Dolphins face a multitude of dangers, such as fishing, pollution, collisions with ships, entanglement in fishing gear and habitat degradation.
Read more about adopting a dolphin with the WWF...
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Adopt a Panda
Zhu Xiong was only three years old when she was found in a small farming village in the Pingwu district of China. WWF staff moved her to the Wanglang reserve, the oldest and most remote reserve in China, where she joined 30 other pandas.
Read more about adopting a panda with the WWF...
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Adopt an Elephant
Kiruba lives in Corbett National Park, in the Terai Arc lowlands of India. She has a son and a daughter, and is the dominant female in an extended family of more than 20 elephants. As the matriarch of the group she is relied upon to find food, water and safe
Read more about adopting an elephant with the WWF...
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Adopt a Rhino
The greatest threat facing rhinos today is the demand for their horn, which is used in traditional Chinese medicine, and is traded illegally. WWF aims to eliminate illegal and unsustainable trade by supporting the enforcement of appropriate wildlife trade laws, and helping to develop them where they do not yet exist.
Read more about adopting a rhino with the WWF...
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Adopt a Tiger
Malu Pothi is one of the last 123 tigers left in Nepal. It's vital that we do everything we can to protect these beautiful creatures. WWF is monitoring the tigers in Suklaphanta, where Malu Pothi lives, and strengthening anti-poaching patrols in the area.
Read more about adopting a tiger with the WWF...
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Adopt a Polar Bear
The Svalbard polar bears are a group of male and female bears aged between 5 and 12 years old. They live in the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic, which belongs to Norway. Svalbard is made up of three larger islands and numerous smaller islands and approximately 60% of the archipelago is covered in glaciers.
Read more about adopting polar bears with the WWF...
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