WILDLANTERNS UPDATE
WildLanterns opening will be delayed tonight, November 27, 2024, by 1 hour and opening at 5:00 p.m.

Community Conservation

COMMUNITY LED CONSERVATION

 

Local people must not only benefit from conservation, but must lead efforts to preserve land and wildlife. Woodland Park Zoo’s conservation initiatives include pioneering community-driven initiatives that conserve landscapes while ensuring local community ownership, decision-making and benefits.

Ground-breaking community projects include governance institution building, community protected area creation and management, conservation-focused one-health initiatives, sustainable livelihoods enterprises, and school and community education projects. From Tanzania to Papua New Guinea, communities are empowered to manage their lands sustainably. Communities are also given a stronger voice at the local and national level, as new governance institutions provide a platform for engaging directly with government entities and the larger international community.

 

Coexistence

 

Fostering Coexistence Between People and Wildlife

As species recover, or where they still exist in abundance, there may be a need to find ways to help people live side-by-side with their wild neighbors while avoiding conflict.

As the global human population increases and wild landscapes disappear or become limited in size, humans and wildlife will only interact more frequently, and the need to foster coexistence will become ever more important. Woodland Park Zoo will continue to implement coexistence strategies in all of our landscapes, including here in the Pacific Northwest.

 

 

Limiting Human-Wildlife Conflict

In some cases this may involve ways to avoid or limit human-wildlife conflict, such as building predator-proof corrals for livestock, as programs do in Tanzania (lions) and Kyrgyzstan (snow leopards). It may be helping to find ways for people to live peacefully alongside wildlife, as we do in Malaysia (tigers), Borneo (elephants and orangutans), Congo basin (gorillas), or even in and around urban Seattle, Washington (coyotes, bobcats, bears, and the slowly recovering wolf population in the state).

Our Mission

Woodland Park Zoo saves wildlife and inspires everyone to make conservation a priority in their lives.

Land Acknowledgment

Woodland Park Zoo recognizes that these are the lands of the Tribal signatories of the Treaty of Point Elliott. We acknowledge their stewardship of this place continues to this day and that it is our responsibility to join them to restore the relationship with the living world around us.


5500 Phinney Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98103   |  206.548.2500  |   zooinfo@zoo.org


Association of Zoos & Aquariums
Seattle Parks & Recreation
Humane Certification