Biodiversity Day

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Today is Biodiversity Day. In honor of the unique plants and animals in Southern California we encourage you to discover nature. Review these nine ways you can support the Puente-Chino Hills Wildlife Corridor today and every day.

🚶Visit Chino Hills State Park

🌱 Volunteer

➡️ Learn more & Donate

Learn about the residents of the Puente-Chino Hills Wildlife Corridor and their needs. All living things need:

  • Food sources
  • Local shelter opportunities
  • Others of their own and other species (genetic and species diversity)
  • Options to migrate

Many of us are afraid of wild animals and see them as a threat. In reality, wild animals don’t look to harm humans. Like all of us, wild species look for a hospitable space to call home. Wild species deserve our compassion and protection.

Many have said:
“We fear what we don’t understand.”

Fear blocks learning, and learning is the antidote to fear and the path to love!

What better way to learn to care more about the natural world than to see it for yourself?

Go on a hike, camp for a night or two, or participate in an interpretive program!

Explore one-day or long term volunteer opportunities, such as our partners:

  • Chino Hills State Park
  • Chino Hills State Park Interpretive Association
  • California State Parks Foundation
  • Puente Hills Habitat Authority

Keep the conversation going!

Explore the ways the human world impacts, constrains, or can help the natural world to thrive.

Love and passion are contagious!

Watch agendas, testify in meetings, and write to your policy makers encouraging everyone to prioritize protection of the Wildlife Corridor, and the natural world in general.

Impacts have been destroying native habitats for about 200 years. Impacts continue today, with ever more efforts to expand human sprawl in replacement of native habitats.

Check out HillsForEveryone.org to learn more and get involved.

Hills For Everyone relies on foundation grants and individual donations to meet its mission.

Donate to Hills For Everyone and other local nonprofits working in Wildlife Corridor to ensure the wildlands are conserved for everyone, forever.