GC Featured in Variety: Bob Woodruff’s ‘Last Lands’ Docuseries on the Harrowing Fight to Protect Earth’s Threatened Ecosystems
In a follow-up to Last Lands 1, which was a 2-Time Emmy Nominee, Season 2 is a two-part series focusing on Central America, including El Mirador in Guatemala and Coiba National Park in Panama. We at GC hope this series will inspire thousands of people to help Protect Our Planet.
Watch the Trailer:
Docuseries “Last Lands,” hosted by ABC News correspondent Bob Woodruff, returns for Season 2 for new on-the-front-lines dispatch from the battle to protect the health of the planet.
The two-part special will premiere on ABC News Live, Disney+ and Hulu on Thursday, Oct. 16, at 8:30 p.m. ET. The second episode will go live the following week on Oct. 23. The documentary series, presented in partnership with not-for-profit environmental organization Global Conservation, spotlights conservation efforts to preserve Earth’s most threatened ecosystems.
Two-part series premieres Oct. 16 on ABC News Live, Disney+ and Hulu
Saving the Last Koalas is one of twelve films and a lever for a National Campaign to both Protect the GKNP and Stop all native logging in Australia.
A Royal Bengal tiger was photographed during a camera-trap survey conducted recently in the sanctuary with technical support from Bengaluru-based Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE).
Through enhanced patrols, technology deployment, expanded partnerships, key species protection, and community empowerment, multiple initiatives continued to support sustainable marine conservation across East Kalimantan and Maluku.
The Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE) program in Arunachal Pradesh—part of the wider Himalayan Initiative—works across one of the most irreplaceable and least-protected biodiversity regions on earth.
The Ann Cottrell Free Animal Reporting Award Goes to
ABC News Live with Global Conservation for Last Lands: South Africa
Funded by Global Conservation, For the Oceans Foundation has announced the successful completion of the first phase of the “Peace for the Pacific” Expedition, a scientific, monitoring, and marine documentation mission that covered more than 600 nautical miles throughout Costa Rica’s Eastern Tropical Pacific. PftP was developed by For the Oceans Foundation within the framework of the One Ocean Worldwide Coalition (OOWC).
Global Conservation and Busch Gardens Conservation Fund Announce Historic $2 Million Grant for Wildlife Recovery of Lions, Rhinos, Elephants, Hippos, Hyenas, and Giraffes in Uganda’s National Parks
In a historic move, the New South Wales government has announced a Great Koala National Park will be established on the state’s Mid North Coast, in a bid to protect vital koala habitat and stop the species’ sharp decline.
Global Conservation reports from Belize on the effectiveness of the 2025 enforcement and scientific adaptive management of Turneffe Atoll, the country’s largest Marine Protection Area (MPA).
While Bora Bora has been considered a prime destination for vacationing in one of the world's most beautiful island chains, decades of tourism, including sports fishing, and an explosion of non-native people moving there have left a significant number of reef systems dead or depleted. GC now collaborates with the French Polynesian government, researchers, locals, and more to save this local marine ecosystem.
During the month of May, Global Conservation, in collaboration with Panama’s National System of Protected Areas (SINAP), led a three-day training program for Panama National Park Rangers. More than 20 park ranger supervisors and field-level rangers from various Panamanian national parks attended. The training was designed to equip these supervisors and rangers with knowledge and skills they could pass along to other park rangers.
Following the launch of the Banda Seas Project in April, patrol teams from the Fisheries and Marine Affairs Department (DKP) of Maluku, local NGOs, the Navy, and the Marine Police conducted three patrol missions across Banda Neira, West Seram, and the Kei Archipelago, covering approximately 360 km of marine waters.