Photo Credits (continued)Page 19Road-sign in Tunisia indicating a water point in the desert.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 19A O<strong>ne</strong> Pla<strong>ne</strong>t Living project in Portugal is protecting andrestoring an important wetlands area.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 20Bo<strong>ne</strong>lli’s eagle, Hieraaetus fasciatus.Central Africa. Southern Africa. Hieraaetus fasciatus Bo<strong>ne</strong>lli’seagle Central and Southern Africa.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Martin HARVEYIMAGE No.: 55122Page 21La Grande Motte, HÈrault, France.Mediterra<strong>ne</strong>an Sea.Heavy development for tourism infrastructure, La GrandeMotte by the Mediterra<strong>ne</strong>an sea in summer, France.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Michel GUNTHERIMAGE No.: 111194Page 21Wi<strong>ne</strong> maturing in traditional oak barrels in Palmela, Portugal.©PelicanoPage 22Peru. Bagging the coffee harvest in the high jungle town ofQuillabamba. Peru. IMAGE No.: 50751© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Edward PARKERPage 22The Ivory Park eco-village <strong>ne</strong>ar Johan<strong>ne</strong>sburg, South Africa,funded by South Africa’s Department of Environmental Affairsand Tourism’s Poverty Relief Programme.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 23City lights and heavy traffic at night. Tokyo, Japan. March 2006.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Michel GUNTHERIMAGE No.: 114843Page 23The average Londo<strong>ne</strong>r knows just 3 <strong>ne</strong>ighbours, but atBedZED the number is 19.© BioRegionalPage 24Mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei); RwandaMountain Gorilla with baby, Rwanda. Projectnumber: RW0006.© Timothy GEER / <strong>WWF</strong>-CanonIMAGE No.: 4587Page 25MSC-certified fishermen catching lobsters off thecoast of Mexico.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 27Luis and Joe Mitchell, age 3.© Siobhan MitchellPage 28Karachi, Pakistan.Heavy traffic in Karachi Pakistan.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Mauri RAUTKARIIMAGE No.: 5752862 The <strong>WWF</strong> Pocket Guide to a O<strong>ne</strong> Pla<strong>ne</strong>t <strong>Lifestyle</strong> // www.panda.org/o<strong>ne</strong>pla<strong>ne</strong>tEXITSEARCHPRINTBACKNEXT
Page 28Airpla<strong>ne</strong>s pattern (multi exposure). Austria.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Anton VORAUERIMAGE No.: 106526Page 29Sweden.Separation of household waste, Sweden.© <strong>WWF</strong> / Kjell-Ar<strong>ne</strong> LARSSONIMAGE No.: 39901Page 30Forest in Grisons, Switzerland, where wood is harvestedaccording to FSC norms.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 31<strong>WWF</strong>’s <strong>ne</strong>w office in the Netherlands is a carbon-<strong>ne</strong>utralbuilding, over 99 per cent of the wood used is FSC certified,and it incorporates bird <strong>ne</strong>sting sites embedded in the walls.The surrounding area is a nature reserve.© <strong>WWF</strong> InternationalPage 34Portugal. Processing cork oak barks. Amorim Corkprocessing factory (biggest cork processor in the world)in Coruche. Ribatejo region, Portugal. Covering about 2.7million hectares and extending across Portugal, Spain,Algeria, Morocco, Italy, Tunisia and France, the cork oaklandscapes represent o<strong>ne</strong> of the best examples of theinteraction between people and nature in the region. In theselandscapes high conservation value forests alternate withfarmland systems, which integrate extensive agriculture,forestry, grazing, hunting and other recreational uses. Inaddition to providing a source of income for hundredsof thousands of people in the region, cork ecosystemssupport a rich biodiversity, including endangered species.But over the last decade, damaging policies, poor forestmanagement and a change in the cork market have resultedin the degradation and loss of these unique habitats. <strong>WWF</strong> isimplementing a <strong>ne</strong>w programme to reverse damaging trendsand to improve conditions for the environmental, social andeconomic balance of these landscapes.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Sebastian RICHIMAGE No.: 113083Page 35Worker at La Chonta timber company (member of BoliviaFTN - Forest and Trade Network). Santa Cruz, Bolivia.October, 2005. IMAGE No.: 116211© <strong>WWF</strong> / Andrés UNTERLADSTAETTERPage 36<strong>WWF</strong>-related activities, Tunisia.El Feidja National Park, Tunisia. Mapping process. Staff at ElFeidja National Park’s quarters. Tunisia.© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / Homo ambiens/R.Isotti-A.Cambo<strong>ne</strong>.IMAGE No.: 113437Page 40A prototype eco-holiday home in Portugal. The zero-carbon,zero-waste villa is highly e<strong>ne</strong>rgy-efficient and includes a highpercentage of recycled building materials.© Eduardo GonçalvesPage 42Humpback whale, Megaptera novaeangliae.Massachusetts, USA / United States of America.Megaptera novaeangliae, Humpback Whale feeding (fluke).Cape Cod, Massachussets, USA. IMAGE No.: 9904© <strong>WWF</strong>-Canon / William W. ROSSITERThe <strong>WWF</strong> Pocket Guide to a O<strong>ne</strong> Pla<strong>ne</strong>t <strong>Lifestyle</strong> // www.panda.org/o<strong>ne</strong>pla<strong>ne</strong>t63EXITSEARCHPRINTBACKNEXT