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Laura (#27): Next adventures in Newfoundland

by Laura King | Oct 20, 2019 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures

I know I’m meant to be writing about what I’ve been up to since Mauritius, especially because I helped get the stories of other past New Noah alumni up for this Next Adventures series. But I haven’t written my own yet. Somehow, the scale of the...
New Noah Update: Amélie heads north

New Noah Update: Amélie heads north

by Wildlife Preservation Canada | Jul 4, 2019 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures

Amélie Roberto-Charron has returned back home to Canada after a life-changing experience as Canada’s 29th New Noah. What has Amélie been up to? Since returning to Canada, Amélie has moved to Yellowknife to pursue an...
Diane (#11): Next Adventures at Parks Canada

Diane (#11): Next Adventures at Parks Canada

by Laura King | Aug 31, 2018 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures

Diane Casimir was the 11th New Noah and has been working at Parks Canada for 11 years. Here she shares an update with us about what she’s been up to in the decades since Mauritius. Thanks Diane! I was Wildlife Preservation Canada’s 11th New Noah,...

Josh (#23): Next Adventures in land conservation

by Laura King | Apr 6, 2018 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures

Josh Noseworthy is a registered professional forester and wildlife biologist who was Wildlife Preservation Canada’s 23rd New Noah. Since his experience in Jersey and Mauritius he’s completed a Master’s degree in Conservation Leadership and continued...
Saving the World’s Rarest Bird

Saving the World’s Rarest Bird

by Wildlife Preservation Canada | Jan 30, 2018 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures, Species at Risk

~ Myles Lamont, Canada’s New Noah 2013 This right here was once one of the world’s rarest birds. It teetered on the brink of extinction with only 10 birds left on the planet in 1991. Let that sink in for a moment. The pink pigeon hovered right on the edge...
Tara (#20): Next Adventures in migratory bird conservation

Tara (#20): Next Adventures in migratory bird conservation

by Laura King | Dec 17, 2017 | Canada's New Noahs Next Adventures

After working on the Eastern Loggerhead Shrike project in Ontario, Tara Imlay was the 20th New Noah and has continued to stay very involved with Wildlife Preservation Canada (WPC) since then. For her PhD, with Dr. Marty Leonard at Dalhousie University she has been...
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Wildlife Preservation Canada saves animals on the brink of extinction. Since 1985, we’ve been saving critically endangered species – species whose numbers in the wild are so low that a great deal more than habitat protection is required to recover them.

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