A squirrel monkey.
Make a difference today at www.natureandculture.org
YOUR IMPACT IN 2020 Nature and Culture is incredibly grateful for the work that has been accomplished thanks to your generosity. Together we protected more than one million acres of precious wild places in 2020. Celebrating the declaration of Carpish Regional Conservation Area in January 2020.
2020 Expenses
A NOTE FROM NATURE AND CULTURE PRESIDENT This was not exactly the note I was expecting to write last June during the first wave of the pandemic. I knew I would share the remarkable outpouring of care and compassion from the Nature and Culture Community, your remarkable care and compassion during a time of unprecedented challenges. I knew I would highlight our staff’s resilience and determination to advance our mission. What I didn’t expect was to celebrate the creation of more than one million acres of new protected areas in 2020. This number is higher than our annual average over the last 25 years! All I can say is thank you. We could not have achieved this without you with us every step of the way. As exciting as our recent accomplishments are, they also underscore our urgent race against time. Scientists predict that climate change and habitat loss could drive more than one million species to extinction within the next fifty years. We risk losing myriad plants and animals before we even learn they exist, which is heartbreaking to contemplate. You give me hope that we will save many more wild places. With committed supporters like you, using a combination of the innovative and the tried-and-true, we will continue to do what we best: protect nature and empower cultures for generations to come. I hope you will continue supporting this great work in 2021. Matt Clark, President and CEO
Your Impact at a Glance 1,005,217 new acres conserved
43 species studied
88,905,286 tons of carbon stored in newly protected acres
244 local communities & 23 indigenous nations supported
367,583 people with newly protected water supplies
2,091 park guards & local people trained