
Please just stop clearing all remaining native habitat JUST STOP!!
Home » defendingparadise » Please just stop clearing all
Please just stop clearing all remaining native habitat JUST STOP!!
I support this initiative because I want this world to be a better place for all spicies.
Dear M.Bezos Space is ok but i’d much rather you helped save the planet we’re living on and especially that tiny part where forests and their birds make paradise alive.
These incredible animals have survived for thousands of years and it would be tragic to lose them due to destruction of their habitat.
We support the birds of paradise
Please protect the rainforest habitat that these beautiful birds need to survive and also please protect the birds Sir David Attenborough quite rightly rates seeing these stunning birds in real
Thank you for doing what you do. You are in the trenches fighting for all of us. Well done. Keep up the good work!
#ECONUSA 관해서 잘 모르지만 구독하면서 함께하겠습니다. 감사합니다.
The Birds of Paradise, simply exist; due to the environment provided by the forests in the region (Papua and Maluku). Years and years of evolution, combined with the unique environment
I hope by defending paradise, it may keep the paradise bird awake and not extinct… Thank you ☺️
Papua dan Maluku tanpa Cendrawasih, kehilangan identitas. Cendrawasih tanpa hutan hujan tropis, hilang rumah, hilang keberadaan.
We need to protect the rainforest not only for the birds of paradise but everyone. Once it’s gone and you realise you need it, it’s too late.
I have always loved Birds of Paradise. They are so beautiful and unique. Habitats around the world must be saved or none of us will have a future.
The forests of West Papua and the Maluku islands are the most intact forests left in Indonesia. With plantation and mining companies having ravished the forests in the western islands
Hello 👋 My name is Kahleo Thompson, I’m a 15 year old nature lover and Photographer. I’ve been amazed by the natural world since I remember when my mom would
I’ve been fascinated by the Birds of Paradise since I read a beautifully illustrated 1950s article about them in National Geographic over 50 years ago. I continue to avidly follow