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© Lora Denis
Participants gather for a briefing on the LTMP from Teagan Netten, conservation science coordinator at Ontario Nature © Ethan Owen
Spanning 3,000 acres of wetlands and forest, Wye Marsh is a Provincially Significant Wetland (PSW) located on the south shore of Georgian Bay that provides habitat for many of Ontario’s most vulnerable species. This includes 11 of Ontario’s 15 snake species many of which are declining due to habitat loss, road mortality, and persecution. The ...
Fielding Memorial Park fieldtrip, Sudbury © Noah Cole
Ontario Nature is excited to officially announce an additional 13,000 hectares of protected and conserved areas now contributing towards Canada’s target to protect 30 percent of all lands and waters by 2030, known as the 30×30 target. The 30×30 target represents a national and international movement to halt and reverse biodiversity loss through well-connected, equitably ...
Eastern coyote © Andrew Interisano
As I watched the tail end of the evening news in my living room, I suddenly heard yelling and gloved hands clapping loudly outside. My first thought was coyotes. Sure enough, our two resident coyotes sauntered by on a lawn across the street, completely ignoring the human noise. The male is a handsome specimen. An ...
June 13, 2025–Luke Bondi
Conservation News•Boreal Forest•Campaigns and advocacy•Climate Change•Land-use planning•Protected Places•Species at Risk
Cochrane Area Wildfire 2023 © AFFES-MNRF
During a global climate and biodiversity crisis, Ontario’s 2025 budget, introduced as Bill 24, Plan to Protect Ontario Act, fails to deliver critical investments in nature protection and conservation. Instead, it slashes funding for essential services like emergency preparedness and forest firefighting while passing environmental conservation costs from proponents to taxpayers. Here’s what you need ...
Towards Haldimand County © Adam Moss CC BY 2.0
The Government’s of Ontario’s Bill 5 — dubbed the “Protecting Ontario by Unleashing its Economy Act”— isn’t just a reckless step toward unchecked development. It’s a sweeping attack on Haudenosaunee rights, environmental protections, and democratic governance in Ontario. For the Haudenosaunee, it signals a dangerous regression — one where colonialism is repackaged as “economic growth,” ...
Laurel Creek Conservation Area © Carl Hiebert / Grand River Conservation Authority