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Why support Mongabay?

Every year, 8-10 million people visit Mongabay’s environmental news and education content, including hundreds of thousands of school children. Our projects range from our daily conservation and environmental news service to nature-themed early-childhood readers to Mongabay-Indonesia, an Indonesian-language environmental platform. To learn more about our work, please see our annual reports or our success stories section.

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Mongabay depends on support from readers like you to sustain these resources. Please consider making a donation or spreading the word about Mongabay to your friends, family, and colleagues.

If you are interested in making a direct donation online, you can use Paypal (secure and does not require an account), Just Give, or send a check.

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Mongabay.org
P.O. Box 0291
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Other ways to help

Are you interesting in contributing in other ways or supporting specific programs? For example:

Please contact Tiffany Roufs: tiffany [at] mongabay.org

Other ways to help

Beyond providing financial support, you can show your support of several ways.

  1. Volunteering – We have several projects for volunteers ranging from translation of a children’s text about rainforests (currently available in nearly 40 languages) to social media. If you are interested in learning more, please check out our volunteering/internship page.
  2. Buying through Amazon links – You can use the following Amazon link to buy books, music and other merchandise from Amazon.com. Each time you use this link to make a purchase a small amount (1-5% depending on the item) will go towards the site but the price you pay for books and other goods will be unaffected.
  3. Our book for kids and adults – Rainforests by Rhett Ayers Butler, founder and editor of mongabay.com. An overview of tropical rainforests for kids, based on mongabay.com’s popular web site for children (kids.mongabay.com). Rainforests describes tropical rainforests, why they are important, and what is happening to them.
  4. Mongabay gear – You can buy mongabay.com and wildmadagascar.org apparel. A portion of each sale goes to the site.
  5. Become a member – Members have access to exclusive content, see fewer ads, and enjoy higher resolutions images, in addition to knowing they are helping support our indepedent reporting.
  6. Telling your friends, family, classmates, and colleagues about Mongabay – We’re on social media, including Twitter and Facebook.

Our programs

Mongabay has three major program areas.

Education: Few children are lucky enough to have hands-on experiences in tropical forests. Many kids — especially in inner cities and poor communities — don’t even have chances to experience nature in any form. Disconnected from the world around them, these potential environmental advocates aren’t aware of the importance of native ecosystems or the fate that is befalling them. Mongabay.org’s education initiative aims to change that. With activities and lessons that meet state standards without requiring a teacher to commit to an entire environmental curriculum, Mongabay.org’s freely available materials boost environmental awareness among a generation that will be faced with many of the tough decisions our generation has not had to make.

Journalism: Many important environmental stories are never properly told, but ignorance rarely triggers resolution. Mongabay.org’s journalism program enables journalists to pursue in-depth reporting on key environmental topics, generating stories and pictures to illustrate problems and solutions. Content produced under this program is registered under an open Creative Commons license to allow it to be repurposed across other media.

Overseas reporting: Countries that suffer the highest rates of forest loss and degradation often lack sufficient environmental news reporting. Mongabay.org’s overseas reporting initiatives will address this shortfall. In May 2012, we launched Mongabay-Indonesia to provide in-depth coverage of environmental issues and the social and economic factors that underpin them. Mongabay-Indonesia has been a resounding success to date, with rapidly growing readership, social media following, and influence. Our next target is Spanish-speaking Latin America, a region that holds the second largest extent of forest cover after Brazil and faces a wide range of social and environmental challenges.