World Wildlife Fund's Gift Catalog - 2008-2009 - (Page 57) Adopt a Sumatran Rhino CR E The Sumatran rhino is the smallest species of rhino and is found on both Borneo and Sumatra, with only a tiny population surviving on Borneo. Deforestation for coffee production and other crops is claiming more and more of their habitat, decimating their population. They also face threats from poachers who illegally trade their horns. $100 $50 $25 CTRI Adopt a Proboscis Monkey EN The proboscis monkey, which is found only on Borneo, is a good climber and an excellent swimmer. But they are named for this most distinctive facial feature — their bulging noses. Females are believed to prefer larger noses in their mates. Habitat loss has caused a drop in population and today, fewer than 8,000 remain. $100 CTPM $50 $25 EXTRAORDINARY GIFTS Protect the World’s Rarest Rhino From Poaching Poaching has devastated the Javan rhino population. Armed and organized criminal gangs hunt and kill them for their horns, which are treasured in some traditional medicines. But in Indonesia’s Ujung Kulon National Park, an innovative anti-poaching program supported by WWF is offering new hope for the survival of the largest remaining population of this critically endangered rhino. Your gift will protect Javan rhinos by funding WWF’s aggressive anti-poaching patrols in the national park, and support our research to better understand this population through still camera traps, video cameras and tracking. Javan Rhino camera trap photograph A gift of $10,000 will help fund WWF’s critical conservation efforts to protect Javan rhinos before it’s too late. Your gift includes an exclusive symbolic adoption, including an adoption certificate, camera trap photo of a Javan rhino, plush, pin, shirt and hat. Please call WWF’s exclusive Extraordinary Gifts line at 1-888-993-1100 for more details about these opportunities. Visit www.worldwildlife.org/gifts or call toll-free 1-800-CALL WWF 57 http://www.worldwildlife.org/ogc/species_SKU.cfm?cqs=CTPM&sc=AWY0900WCN11 http://www.worldwildlife.org/ogc/species_SKU.cfm?cqs=CTRI&sc=AWY0900WCN11 http://www.worldwildlife.org/ogc/index.cfm?sc=AWY0900WCN11
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