Actualités
Les forêts du Canada sont puissamment et intimement liées à la vie sur Terre. Elles produisent l’oxygène que nous respirons, purifient l’eau que nous buvons et absorbent le carbone qui réchauffe notre ...
La Grande tourbière de la Jacques-Cartier, à 40 km de route au nord-ouest de Québec, est pleine des secrets d’un passé lointain et d’un avenir durable. Malgré son appellation au singulier, ce vaste ...
Worldwide conservation efforts depend on the next generation of conservation leaders. As a Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) conservation intern, you’ll build a diverse skill set and gain practical ...
Through collaboration with farmers, ranchers, Indigenous communities and government, the Prairie Grasslands Action Plan ...
The Nature Conservancy of Canada's (NCC's) first project in British Columbia was to help with the acquisition of Mud Bay in 1974 — a vibrant intertidal property in Vancouver's Boundary Bay. Since then ...
The Nature Conservancy of Canada's staff, board members and volunteers are all passionate about our mission to protect the best of Canada's natural legacy. We work in every province in Canada. We have ...
The Great Jacques-Cartier Bog, a 40-kilometre drive northwest of Quebec City, is full of secrets about a distant past and a sustainable future. Despite the singular bog of its name, this 660-hectare ...
Purple loosestrife is a wetland plant native to Europe and Asia that was brought to North America in the early 19th century. This highly invasive plant was likely introduced when its seeds were ...
From butterfly and bird inventories, to cleaning up beaches and removing invasive species, we offer a variety of events to suit your interests. Don't see something that works for you? Sign up to be a ...
The Nature Conservancy of Canada’s Conservation Volunteers program engages people of all ages in the protection of our country's species and natural habitats. It provides a meaningful, hands-on ...
Symbolically adopt a species or habitat, or choose a holiday e-card.
Autumn olive, along with several other non-native invasive shrubs, was planted in southern Ontario in the 1970s by well-meaning land managers thinking that they would provide excellent wildlife ...
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