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Wildlife Conservation Society

The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) is a 501(c)(3) non-governmental organization headquartered at the Bronx Zoo in New York City, that aims to conserve the world's largest wild places in 14 priority regions. Founded in 1895 as the New York Zoological Society (NYZS), the organization is now led by President and CEO, Monica P. Medina, who replaced long time President and CEO Cristián Samper in 2023.[2][3] WCS manages four New York City wildlife parks in addition to the Bronx Zoo: the Central Park Zoo, New York Aquarium, Prospect Park Zoo and Queens Zoo. Together these parks receive 4 million visitors per year.[4] All of the New York City facilities are accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).[5]

Wildlife Conservation Society
Logo used since 2015
AbbreviationWCS
FormationApril 26, 1895; 128 years ago (1895-04-26) (as New York Zoological Society)
Founders
Type501(c)(3) non-profit organization
Purpose
HeadquartersBronx Zoo
Bronx, New York, United States
Region
Worldwide
Chair
Alejandro Santo Domingo
Vice chair
Hamilton E. James
Key people
Monica Medina (President and Chief Executive Officer)
Staff
3,700[1]
Websitewww.wcs.org
Formerly called
New York Zoological Society (1895–1993)

History edit

Founding edit

Tour through Bronx Zoo, 1950

The Wildlife Conservation Society was originally chartered by the state of New York on April 26, 1895.[6][7]: 52  Then known as the New York Zoological (also reported as "Zoölogical") Society,[6] the organization embraced a mandate to advance native wildlife conservation, promote the study of zoology, and create a first-class zoological park that would be free to the public. Its name was changed to the Wildlife Conservation Society in 1993. Andrew H. Green, was the first president of the society, but was replaced by Levi P Morton after Green resigned due to declining health.[7] Henry Fairfield Osborn, who was the curator of the American Museum of Natural History and the founder of the American Eugenics Society, was Morton's successor.[8] Madison Grant, popular eugenicist and author of The Passing of The Great Race, acted as the society's secretary and the chairman of the executive committee.[9][10] William Temple Hornaday operated as the founding Director and General Curator of the park itself. Together, these leaders wrote hundreds of works promoting preservationist values. Their writings and arguments were foundational for conservation, but notably partially motivated by racial discrimination, hyper masculinity, and an association between protecting the nation's wildlife and the nation's white population.[11]

Other notable figures were also involved in the Society's creation including George Bird Grinnell, founder of the Audubon Society and editor of Forest and Stream Magazine and members of the Boone and Crockett Club.[7]

The Bronx Zoo (formerly the New York Zoological Park) was designed along the lines of other cultural institutions in New York City, such as the American Museum of Natural History. The city provided the land for the new zoo and some funding for buildings and annual operating costs. WCS raised most of the funds for construction and operations from a private donors, and selected the scientific and administrative personnel. Hornaday's tenure was very significant for conservation, but he encountered controversy after the exhibiting Ota Benga, a Mbuti (Congo pygmy) man.

Work edit

In the late nineteenth century William Temple Hornaday, then director of the New York Zoological Park (now the Bronx Zoo), carried out a direct-mail survey of wildlife conditions through the United States, and publicized the decline of birds and mammals in the organization's annual reports. He was a prolific writer who published The Extermination of the American Bison and Our Vanishing Wildlife: It's Extermination and Preservation among many other texts. Our Vanishing Wildlife, in particular, revealed an association between species extinction and the decline of the white race in America.[11]

In 1897 Hornaday also hired field researcher Andrew J. Stone to survey the condition of wildlife in the territory of Alaska. On the basis of these studies, Hornaday led the campaign for new laws to protect the wildlife there and the United States as a whole. In 1901, a small herd of American Bison were gathered in a 20-acre meadow just off what is now the Pelham Parkway roadway. Starting in 1905, Hornaday led a national campaign to reintroduce the almost extinct bison to government sponsored refuges.[12][13] Hornaday, Theodore Roosevelt and others formed the American Bison Society in 1905. The Bronx Zoo sent 15 bison to Wichita Reserve in 1907 and additional bison in later years. The saving of this uniquely American symbol is one of the great success stories in the history of wildlife conservation. Hornaday campaigned for wildlife protection throughout his thirty years as director of the Bronx Zoo. Beginning in 1906, Hornaday featured Ota Benga, a member of the Mbuti from the Congo, in a zoo exhibit.[14] In July 2020, the Wildlife Conservation Society apologized.[15]

Madison Grant and Osborn worked together with John C. Merriam, another eugenics supporter, in 1918 to form the Save-The-Redwoods-League.[11] Together, they succeeded in convincing legislators to preserve many redwoods by comparing the trees to a race in danger. Local communities sometimes saw the attitudes of Grant, Osborn, and Hornaday as being elitist compared to those of poorer citizens and nonwhite citizens.[11]

William Beebe, the first curator of birds at the Bronx Zoo, began a program of field research soon after the Bronx Zoo opened. His research on wild pheasants took him to Asia from 1908 to 1911 and resulted in a series of books on the birds.[16] Beebe's field work also resulted in the creation of the Society's Department of Tropical Research, which Beebe directed from 1922 until his retirement in 1948. From 1930 to 1934, off of the coast of Bermuda, Beebe conducted research in an undersea vessel called the bathysphere. The vessel made thirty-five dives in total, taking him half a mile deep and along the ocean floor. During the dives, Beebe made observations on bioluminescent fish, as well as identifying several new species. This expedition was significant, as it was the first time humans observed the bottom of the deep sea and its creatures in their natural habitat.[17] The bathysphere is currently displayed at the New York Aquarium.[18]

During the World War II era, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Jr was elected president of the NYZS and Laurance Rockefeller was elected as executive committee chairman. A best selling writer on conservation and son of WCS founder Henry Fairfield Osborn, Osborn embraced changes that represented new thinking within the organization. Guests were allowed to bring their own cameras into the Bronx Zoo. Beginning with the African Plains exhibit in 1941, animals were grouped by continents and ecosystems, rather than genetic orders and families.[19]

After World War II, under the leadership of Osborn, the organization extended its programs in field biology and conservation. In 1946, WCS helped found the Jackson Hole Wildlife Park, which later became part of Grand Teton National Park in 1962.[20] In the late 1950s, WCS began a series of wildlife surveys and projects in Kenya, Tanganyika (now Tanzania), Uganda, Ethiopia, Sudan, Burma, and the Malay peninsula. In 1959, it sponsored George Schaller's seminal study of mountain gorillas in Congo. Following that expedition, Schaller went on to become the world's preeminent field biologist, studying wildlife throughout Africa, Asia, and South America. Conservation activities continued to expand under the leadership of William G. Conway, who became director of the Bronx Zoo in 1962 and President of WCS in 1992. Active as a field biologist in Patagonia, Conway promoted a new vision of zoos as conservation organizations, which cooperated in breeding endangered species. He also designed new types of zoo exhibits aimed at teaching visitors about habitats that support wildlife, and encouraged the expansion of WCS's field programs.[21]

During the 1960s and 1970s, the WCS took a leadership role in pioneering zoological exhibitions by seeking to recreate natural environments for the animals on display. Under the leadership of WCS director William G. Conway, the Bronx Zoo opened its World of Darkness for nocturnal species in 1969 and its World of Birds for avian displays in 1974.[22] Eventually, New York City turned to WCS to renew and manage three city-run facilities in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. The redesigned Central Park Zoo opened in 1988, followed by the Queens Zoo in 1992 and the Prospect Park Zoo in 1993.[23] From 1994 through 1996 Archie Carr III of WCS helped establish the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary in Belize, a reserve for endangered jaguars.

Today, WCS is working in sixty nations around the world on more than five hundred projects designed to help protect both wildlife and the habitats in which they live.[4] The organization endeavors to work in fourteen priority regions that contain fifty percent of the world's biodiversity. These projects range from the conservation of gorillas in Africa, tigers in Asia, and macaws in South America. In recent years, WCS has actively worked in conflict areas like Afghanistan, South Sudan, and Myanmar, where agreements on wildlife resources have contributed to peace and stability. More than 4 million people visit WCS's wildlife parks in New York City each year.[24][25]

Digital projects edit

WCS has backed numerous digital projects, including the Mannahatta Project/Welikia Project, and the Last of the Wild. The Manhatta Project is an initiative on the historical ecology of the New York area in 1609, prior to colonization. The project illustrates the fifty-five different ecosystems that existed in the region through digital reconstructions.[26] The Last of the Wild is a dataset showing different areas' relative Human Footprint,overlaid onto a map of the world. This data is used to map wild areas, as well as natural resource distribution.[27]

International projects edit

Makira National Park edit

In 2001, in collaboration with the Madagascar Ministry of Environment and Forests, the WCS launched a program to create the 372,470 hectare Makira Forest Protected Area.[28] In 2017, WCS partnered with carbon-reduction platform Cool Effect to allow users to fund ongoing carbon-reduction projects directly supporting the Makira Natural Park.[29]

Melanesia Program edit

Directed by Stacy Jupiter, the Wildlife Conservation Society's Melanesia Program focuses on conservation in the Melanesian region of Oceania. The program works specifically in Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. Melanesia contains a high amount of biodiversity and is home to the world's largest and most elevated tropical islands. The program works both terrestrially and aquatically within the Bismarck Solomon Seas Ecoregion and the Bismarck Forest Corridor. It strives to combine community involvement and conservation rooted in science to resolve issues such as habitat loss, environmental degradation, overexploitation, and climate-change.[30]

Facilities edit

Name Borough Year Founded Joined WCS Size Number of Species
Bronx Zoo Bronx 1899 1899 (Founded by WCS) 265 acres (107 ha) Approx. 650
Central Park Zoo Manhattan 1864 (menagerie)

1934 (zoo)

1988 6.5 acres (2.6 ha) 163
New York Aquarium Brooklyn 1896 (Battery Park location)

1957 (Coney Island location)

1902[31] 14 acres (5.7 ha) 266
Prospect Park Zoo Brooklyn 1890 (menagerie)

1935 (zoo)

1993 12 acres (4.9 ha) 176
Queens Zoo Queens 1968 1988 18 acres (7.3 ha) 75+

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Wildlife Conservation Society - GuideStar Profile".
  2. ^ "Dr. Cristián Samper, WCS President and CEO, Steps Down After Ten Years to Join the Bezos Earth Fund". newsroom.wcs.org. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
  3. ^ "Monica P. Medina, First US Diplomat Designated to Advocate for Global Biodiversity, Named President and CEO of the Wildlife Conservation Society (English, French & Spanish)". newsroom.wcs.org. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
  4. ^ a b "About Us" WCS.org, accessed 23 November 2020
  5. ^ "List of Accredited Zoos and Aquariums" Association of Zoos and Aquariums, aza.org , accessed 23 November 2020
  6. ^ a b "Gov. Morton Signs the Bill Providing for a Zoological Garden in This City". The Sun. April 27, 1895. p. 7. Retrieved January 20, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ a b c New York Zoological Society.; Society, New York Zoological (1896). Annual report of the New York Zoological Society. Vol. 1. New York: The Society.
  8. ^ Fears, Darryl (July 22, 2020). "Liberal, progressive — and racist? The Sierra Club faces its white-supremacist history". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  9. ^ Grant, Madison (1916). The passing of the great race; or, The racial basis of European history. University of Michigan. New York, C. Scribner.
  10. ^ Park, New York Zoological; Hornaday, William Temple (1913). Popular Official Guide to the New York Zoological Park. New York zoological society.
  11. ^ a b c d Powell, Miles A. (2016). Vanishing America : species extinction, racial peril, and the origins of conservation. ISBN 978-0-674-97295-7. OCLC 973532814.
  12. ^ William Temple Hornaday: Saving the American Bison Smithsonian Institution
  13. ^ William Temple Hornaday: Visionary of the National Zoo 2008-06-15 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Institution
  14. ^ Keller, Mitch (2006-08-06). "The Scandal at the Zoo". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  15. ^ Jacobs, Julia (2020-07-29). "Racist Incident From Bronx Zoo's Past Draws Apology". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-07-30.
  16. ^ Beebe, William (1906). The Bird: Its Form and Function. H. Holt.
  17. ^ Beebe, William (January 1933). "Preliminary Account of Deep Sea Dives in the Bathysphere with Especial Reference to One of 2200 Feet". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 19 (1): 178–188. Bibcode:1933PNAS...19..178B. doi:10.1073/pnas.19.1.178. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 1085903. PMID 16587738.
  18. ^ "Bathysphere". History Of Diving Museum. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  19. ^ Bridges, William (1974). Gathering of Animals: An Unconventional History of the New York Zoological Society. Harper & Row Publishers. pp. 450-453. ISBN 0-06-010472-4.
  20. ^ "National Park Service".
  21. ^ Roberts, Sam (2021-11-05). "William Conway, Who Reimagined America's Zoos, Is Dead at 91". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  22. ^ Hancocks, David (2002). A Different Nature: The Paradoxical World of Zoos and Their Uncertain Future. University of California Press. p. 105. ISBN 0-52023676-9.
  23. ^ nyzoosandaquarium.com
  24. ^ Congo Gorilla Forest WCS.org
  25. ^ "Our Work - WCS.org". www.wcs.org. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  26. ^ "Manhatta – Landscape Visualization". Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  27. ^ "Last of the Wild (Geographic), v2: Last of the Wild, v2 | SEDAC". sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  28. ^ Cristián Samper "Pivoting from Paris to Madagascar on Climate Change" Scientific American, 5 December 2015
  29. ^ Cool-Effect-Partners-with-WCS-to-Save-Madagascars-Makira-Natural-Park WCS Newsroom, newsroom.wcs.org 15 June 2017
  30. ^ "Melanesia". Wildlife Conservation Society. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  31. ^ "WCS Milestones In Marine Research & Conservation 1895-2017". newsroom.wcs.org. Retrieved 2022-08-14.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Champion Of Wildlife; Zoological Society at 100 The New York Times
  • 21st Century Tiger 2001-07-21 at the Wayback Machine

wildlife, conservation, society, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Wildlife Conservation Society news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Wildlife Conservation Society WCS is a 501 c 3 non governmental organization headquartered at the Bronx Zoo in New York City that aims to conserve the world s largest wild places in 14 priority regions Founded in 1895 as the New York Zoological Society NYZS the organization is now led by President and CEO Monica P Medina who replaced long time President and CEO Cristian Samper in 2023 2 3 WCS manages four New York City wildlife parks in addition to the Bronx Zoo the Central Park Zoo New York Aquarium Prospect Park Zoo and Queens Zoo Together these parks receive 4 million visitors per year 4 All of the New York City facilities are accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums AZA 5 Wildlife Conservation SocietyLogo used since 2015AbbreviationWCSFormationApril 26 1895 128 years ago 1895 04 26 as New York Zoological Society FoundersAndrew H Green Henry F Osborn Madison GrantType501 c 3 non profit organizationPurposeSpecies conservation Conservation EcologyHeadquartersBronx Zoo Bronx New York United StatesRegionWorldwideChairAlejandro Santo DomingoVice chairHamilton E JamesKey peopleMonica Medina President and Chief Executive Officer Staff3 700 1 Websitewww wbr wcs wbr orgFormerly calledNew York Zoological Society 1895 1993 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Work 1 3 Digital projects 1 4 International projects 1 4 1 Makira National Park 1 4 2 Melanesia Program 2 Facilities 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editFounding edit source source source source Tour through Bronx Zoo 1950The Wildlife Conservation Society was originally chartered by the state of New York on April 26 1895 6 7 52 Then known as the New York Zoological also reported as Zoological Society 6 the organization embraced a mandate to advance native wildlife conservation promote the study of zoology and create a first class zoological park that would be free to the public Its name was changed to the Wildlife Conservation Society in 1993 Andrew H Green was the first president of the society but was replaced by Levi P Morton after Green resigned due to declining health 7 Henry Fairfield Osborn who was the curator of the American Museum of Natural History and the founder of the American Eugenics Society was Morton s successor 8 Madison Grant popular eugenicist and author of The Passing of The Great Race acted as the society s secretary and the chairman of the executive committee 9 10 William Temple Hornaday operated as the founding Director and General Curator of the park itself Together these leaders wrote hundreds of works promoting preservationist values Their writings and arguments were foundational for conservation but notably partially motivated by racial discrimination hyper masculinity and an association between protecting the nation s wildlife and the nation s white population 11 Other notable figures were also involved in the Society s creation including George Bird Grinnell founder of the Audubon Society and editor of Forest and Stream Magazine and members of the Boone and Crockett Club 7 The Bronx Zoo formerly the New York Zoological Park was designed along the lines of other cultural institutions in New York City such as the American Museum of Natural History The city provided the land for the new zoo and some funding for buildings and annual operating costs WCS raised most of the funds for construction and operations from a private donors and selected the scientific and administrative personnel Hornaday s tenure was very significant for conservation but he encountered controversy after the exhibiting Ota Benga a Mbuti Congo pygmy man Work edit In the late nineteenth century William Temple Hornaday then director of the New York Zoological Park now the Bronx Zoo carried out a direct mail survey of wildlife conditions through the United States and publicized the decline of birds and mammals in the organization s annual reports He was a prolific writer who published The Extermination of the American Bison and Our Vanishing Wildlife It s Extermination and Preservation among many other texts Our Vanishing Wildlife in particular revealed an association between species extinction and the decline of the white race in America 11 In 1897 Hornaday also hired field researcher Andrew J Stone to survey the condition of wildlife in the territory of Alaska On the basis of these studies Hornaday led the campaign for new laws to protect the wildlife there and the United States as a whole In 1901 a small herd of American Bison were gathered in a 20 acre meadow just off what is now the Pelham Parkway roadway Starting in 1905 Hornaday led a national campaign to reintroduce the almost extinct bison to government sponsored refuges 12 13 Hornaday Theodore Roosevelt and others formed the American Bison Society in 1905 The Bronx Zoo sent 15 bison to Wichita Reserve in 1907 and additional bison in later years The saving of this uniquely American symbol is one of the great success stories in the history of wildlife conservation Hornaday campaigned for wildlife protection throughout his thirty years as director of the Bronx Zoo Beginning in 1906 Hornaday featured Ota Benga a member of the Mbuti from the Congo in a zoo exhibit 14 In July 2020 the Wildlife Conservation Society apologized 15 Madison Grant and Osborn worked together with John C Merriam another eugenics supporter in 1918 to form the Save The Redwoods League 11 Together they succeeded in convincing legislators to preserve many redwoods by comparing the trees to a race in danger Local communities sometimes saw the attitudes of Grant Osborn and Hornaday as being elitist compared to those of poorer citizens and nonwhite citizens 11 William Beebe the first curator of birds at the Bronx Zoo began a program of field research soon after the Bronx Zoo opened His research on wild pheasants took him to Asia from 1908 to 1911 and resulted in a series of books on the birds 16 Beebe s field work also resulted in the creation of the Society s Department of Tropical Research which Beebe directed from 1922 until his retirement in 1948 From 1930 to 1934 off of the coast of Bermuda Beebe conducted research in an undersea vessel called the bathysphere The vessel made thirty five dives in total taking him half a mile deep and along the ocean floor During the dives Beebe made observations on bioluminescent fish as well as identifying several new species This expedition was significant as it was the first time humans observed the bottom of the deep sea and its creatures in their natural habitat 17 The bathysphere is currently displayed at the New York Aquarium 18 During the World War II era Henry Fairfield Osborn Jr was elected president of the NYZS and Laurance Rockefeller was elected as executive committee chairman A best selling writer on conservation and son of WCS founder Henry Fairfield Osborn Osborn embraced changes that represented new thinking within the organization Guests were allowed to bring their own cameras into the Bronx Zoo Beginning with the African Plains exhibit in 1941 animals were grouped by continents and ecosystems rather than genetic orders and families 19 After World War II under the leadership of Osborn the organization extended its programs in field biology and conservation In 1946 WCS helped found the Jackson Hole Wildlife Park which later became part of Grand Teton National Park in 1962 20 In the late 1950s WCS began a series of wildlife surveys and projects in Kenya Tanganyika now Tanzania Uganda Ethiopia Sudan Burma and the Malay peninsula In 1959 it sponsored George Schaller s seminal study of mountain gorillas in Congo Following that expedition Schaller went on to become the world s preeminent field biologist studying wildlife throughout Africa Asia and South America Conservation activities continued to expand under the leadership of William G Conway who became director of the Bronx Zoo in 1962 and President of WCS in 1992 Active as a field biologist in Patagonia Conway promoted a new vision of zoos as conservation organizations which cooperated in breeding endangered species He also designed new types of zoo exhibits aimed at teaching visitors about habitats that support wildlife and encouraged the expansion of WCS s field programs 21 During the 1960s and 1970s the WCS took a leadership role in pioneering zoological exhibitions by seeking to recreate natural environments for the animals on display Under the leadership of WCS director William G Conway the Bronx Zoo opened its World of Darkness for nocturnal species in 1969 and its World of Birds for avian displays in 1974 22 Eventually New York City turned to WCS to renew and manage three city run facilities in Manhattan Brooklyn and Queens The redesigned Central Park Zoo opened in 1988 followed by the Queens Zoo in 1992 and the Prospect Park Zoo in 1993 23 From 1994 through 1996 Archie Carr III of WCS helped establish the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary in Belize a reserve for endangered jaguars Today WCS is working in sixty nations around the world on more than five hundred projects designed to help protect both wildlife and the habitats in which they live 4 The organization endeavors to work in fourteen priority regions that contain fifty percent of the world s biodiversity These projects range from the conservation of gorillas in Africa tigers in Asia and macaws in South America In recent years WCS has actively worked in conflict areas like Afghanistan South Sudan and Myanmar where agreements on wildlife resources have contributed to peace and stability More than 4 million people visit WCS s wildlife parks in New York City each year 24 25 Digital projects edit WCS has backed numerous digital projects including the Mannahatta Project Welikia Project and the Last of the Wild The Manhatta Project is an initiative on the historical ecology of the New York area in 1609 prior to colonization The project illustrates the fifty five different ecosystems that existed in the region through digital reconstructions 26 The Last of the Wild is a dataset showing different areas relative Human Footprint overlaid onto a map of the world This data is used to map wild areas as well as natural resource distribution 27 International projects edit Makira National Park edit In 2001 in collaboration with the Madagascar Ministry of Environment and Forests the WCS launched a program to create the 372 470 hectare Makira Forest Protected Area 28 In 2017 WCS partnered with carbon reduction platform Cool Effect to allow users to fund ongoing carbon reduction projects directly supporting the Makira Natural Park 29 Melanesia Program edit Directed by Stacy Jupiter the Wildlife Conservation Society s Melanesia Program focuses on conservation in the Melanesian region of Oceania The program works specifically in Fiji Papua New Guinea Solomon Islands and Vanuatu Melanesia contains a high amount of biodiversity and is home to the world s largest and most elevated tropical islands The program works both terrestrially and aquatically within the Bismarck Solomon Seas Ecoregion and the Bismarck Forest Corridor It strives to combine community involvement and conservation rooted in science to resolve issues such as habitat loss environmental degradation overexploitation and climate change 30 Facilities editName Borough Year Founded Joined WCS Size Number of SpeciesBronx Zoo Bronx 1899 1899 Founded by WCS 265 acres 107 ha Approx 650Central Park Zoo Manhattan 1864 menagerie 1934 zoo 1988 6 5 acres 2 6 ha 163New York Aquarium Brooklyn 1896 Battery Park location 1957 Coney Island location 1902 31 14 acres 5 7 ha 266Prospect Park Zoo Brooklyn 1890 menagerie 1935 zoo 1993 12 acres 4 9 ha 176Queens Zoo Queens 1968 1988 18 acres 7 3 ha 75 See also edit21st Century Tiger Climate Community amp Biodiversity Alliance American Bison Society List of nature conservation organizationsReferences edit Wildlife Conservation Society GuideStar Profile Dr Cristian Samper WCS President and CEO Steps Down After Ten Years to Join the Bezos Earth Fund newsroom wcs org Retrieved 2023 08 02 Monica P Medina First US Diplomat Designated to Advocate for Global Biodiversity Named President and CEO of the Wildlife Conservation Society English French amp Spanish newsroom wcs org Retrieved 2023 08 02 a b About Us WCS org accessed 23 November 2020 List of Accredited Zoos and Aquariums Association of Zoos and Aquariums aza org accessed 23 November 2020 a b Gov Morton Signs the Bill Providing for a Zoological Garden in This City The Sun April 27 1895 p 7 Retrieved January 20 2023 via Newspapers com a b c New York Zoological Society Society New York Zoological 1896 Annual report of the New York Zoological Society Vol 1 New York The Society Fears Darryl July 22 2020 Liberal progressive and racist The Sierra Club faces its white supremacist history The Washington Post Retrieved February 19 2022 Grant Madison 1916 The passing of the great race or The racial basis of European history University of Michigan New York C Scribner Park New York Zoological Hornaday William Temple 1913 Popular Official Guide to the New York Zoological Park New York zoological society a b c d Powell Miles A 2016 Vanishing America species extinction racial peril and the origins of conservation ISBN 978 0 674 97295 7 OCLC 973532814 William Temple Hornaday Saving the American Bison Smithsonian Institution William Temple Hornaday Visionary of the National Zoo Archived 2008 06 15 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Institution Keller Mitch 2006 08 06 The Scandal at the Zoo The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 02 15 Jacobs Julia 2020 07 29 Racist Incident From Bronx Zoo s Past Draws Apology The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 07 30 Beebe William 1906 The Bird Its Form and Function H Holt Beebe William January 1933 Preliminary Account of Deep Sea Dives in the Bathysphere with Especial Reference to One of 2200 Feet Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 19 1 178 188 Bibcode 1933PNAS 19 178B doi 10 1073 pnas 19 1 178 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 1085903 PMID 16587738 Bathysphere History Of Diving Museum Retrieved 2022 04 21 Bridges William 1974 Gathering of Animals An Unconventional History of the New York Zoological Society Harper amp Row Publishers pp 450 453 ISBN 0 06 010472 4 National Park Service Roberts Sam 2021 11 05 William Conway Who Reimagined America s Zoos Is Dead at 91 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 04 21 Hancocks David 2002 A Different Nature The Paradoxical World of Zoos and Their Uncertain Future University of California Press p 105 ISBN 0 52023676 9 About the City Zoos nyzoosandaquarium com Congo Gorilla Forest WCS org Our Work WCS org www wcs org Retrieved 2022 04 21 Manhatta Landscape Visualization Retrieved 2022 04 21 Last of the Wild Geographic v2 Last of the Wild v2 SEDAC sedac ciesin columbia edu Retrieved 2022 04 21 Cristian Samper Pivoting from Paris to Madagascar on Climate Change Scientific American 5 December 2015 Cool Effect Partners with WCS to Save Madagascars Makira Natural Park WCS Newsroom newsroom wcs org 15 June 2017 Melanesia Wildlife Conservation Society Retrieved 22 November 2019 WCS Milestones In Marine Research amp Conservation 1895 2017 newsroom wcs org Retrieved 2022 08 14 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wildlife Conservation Society Official website Champion Of Wildlife Zoological Society at 100 The New York Times 21st Century Tiger Archived 2001 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wildlife Conservation Society amp oldid 1200119409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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