SAVE EVERYTHING
SAVE EVERYTHING
CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY
by ensuring the persistence of imperiled species and their habitats with an emphasis on private land.
The Turner Endangered Species Fund and Biodiversity Divisions are dedicated to conserving biological diversity by ensuring the persistence of imperiled species and their habitats with an emphasis on private land.
We aim to use the best science to effectively conserve biodiversity and establish a new level of effectiveness for private-public efforts to redress the extinction crisis.
Much of the wonder of nature can be saved for future generations if conservation activities are more frequently and successfully applied on private working landscapes like those owned by Ted Turner.
Much of the wonder of nature can be saved for future generations if conservation activities are more frequently and successfully applied on private working landscapes like those owned by Ted Turner.
INSPIRING
a new generation of young scientists and policy makers to improve the balance between conservation and commerce
The Future of Funding for Wildlife Conservation
NEWSROOM
Senior Conservation Scientist Ross Kiester of the Turtle Conservancy visits Turner’s New Mexico ranches.
http://tesf.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Kiester-Turtle-Conservancy-article-2.pdfKiester writes about his visit to Turner's New Mexico ranches and the release of the Bolson Tortoises to the wild after dozens of millennia. Kiester Turtle Conservancy articleDownload
Scientists and researchers comment on the need to halt ill-advised culling of wolves in Sweden.
In the prestigious journal Science, TESF scientist, Mike Phillips, and 17 other researchers from five countries drew attention to the need to halt an ill-advised culling of the wolf population in Sweden. http://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.add5299...
A coyote carries dinner.
Resourceful coyote carries its catfish catch home. The catfish was likely caught in Elephant Butte reservoir located approximately three miles from where the picture was taken. Photo taken by Turner Biological Team, Dan Martin and Hunter Prude.