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Freedom for lynx Finja | WWF Germany


Freedom for lynx Finja

🐾 What a magical moment: The first female lynx was released into the wild in the Black Forest and ten more are expected to follow by 2027. The lynx cat Finja comes from a game reserve in Thuringia and was prepared for her release in Rhineland-Palatinate, far from human noises and influences.

🐾 What a magical moment: The first female lynx was released into the wild in the Black Forest and ten more are expected to follow by 2027.

The lynx cat Finja comes from a game reserve in Thuringia and was prepared for her release in Rhineland-Palatinate, far from human noises and influences. After genetic and behavioral-ecological examinations, Finja met all the requirements for release into the wild and could be released into her new home.

All of this is only possible thanks to YOUR support and the years of dialogue between hunters, forest owners and species conservationists. We are very happy about this success for species protection! 💚

A huge thank you also goes to the committed partners Forestry Research and Research Institute BW, Karlsruhe Zoo and the BW State Hunting Association. You can find out more about the project at: https://www.wwf.de/themen-projekte/bedrohte-tier-und-pflanzenarten/luchs/luchse-in-baden-wuerttemberg

It can carry on like this! Specifically, with ten more female lynxes by 2027.

© FVA / WWF

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The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) is one of the largest and most experienced conservation organizations in the world and active in more than 100 countries. Around five million supporters worldwide support him. WWF's global network maintains 90 offices in more than 40 countries. Around the world, employees are currently running 1300 biodiversity conservation projects.

The most important instruments of WWF conservation work are the designation of protected areas and the sustainable, ie nature-friendly use of our natural assets. In addition, the WWF is committed to reducing pollution and wasteful consumption at the expense of nature.

Worldwide, WWF Germany is involved in 21 international project regions for nature conservation. Priorities include the preservation of the Earth's last major forests - in the tropics and in temperate regions -, the fight against climate change, the use of living seas and the preservation of rivers and wetlands worldwide. WWF Germany also runs numerous projects and programs in Germany.

The WWF's goal is clear: if we succeed in sustainably preserving the greatest possible diversity of habitats, we can also save a large part of the world's animal and plant species - and at the same time preserve the network of life that also bears us humans.

Imprint:
https://blog.wwf.de/impressum/

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