The Tonkin snub-nosed monkey is one of the world’s most endangered primates. The last surviving individuals are thought to be confined to a few isolated forest fragments among the karst limestone ...
In 1995, when Fauna & Flora first intervened, the recently rediscovered Antiguan racer was probably the world’s rarest snake, with a total population numbering just 50 individuals on one tiny offshore ...
Fauna & Flora is working across Scotland to empower and connect community-based organisations, enabling them to lead local and national conservation efforts. Fauna & Flora empowers community-based ...
The common chimpanzee, along with the pygmy chimpanzee or bonobo, is the closest living relative of humans. Much like us, these highly intelligent and resourceful primates have incredibly ...
If you’re a skilled institutional fundraiser who wants to get closer to the conservation work your funding makes possible, this could be the role for you. As Senior Programme Development Manager, ...
Fauna & Flora is seeking a highly experienced Head of Institutional Funding & Partnerships. The role will lead a small team to deliver Fauna & Flora’s institutional funding ambition in the ...
High in wild mountain forests of Southeast Asia lives a little-known creature: the serow. Shy and solitary, serows ask for nothing more than to roam the rugged reaches of their territory in peace.
This document is a compilation of biological field survey reports undertaken at the karstic ecosystem of Battambang and Stung Treng provinces, Cambodia. The surveys focused on four taxonomic groups ...
In 2025, in collaboration with Cambodia’s Ministry of Environment and field experts, Fauna & Flora led a biodiversity survey that explored over 60 caves across ten hills in western Cambodia’s ...
As we usher in the new year, it’s time once again to showcase some of the species that will be on Fauna & Flora’s radar in 2026, from supersized spiders to lightning-fast falcons and floral wonders.
Illegal wildlife trade is one of the most pressing threats to our planet’s biodiversity, and a wide variety of people and organisations – from individuals and community groups to NGOs and government ...