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Save a Rainforest for $40 this Holiday Season

BLOGS

Save a Rainforest for $40 this Holiday Season

December 17th, 2010
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Save a Rainforest

What’s a more festive use of $40 for the holidays: a pretty good bottle of champagne; less than 10 grams of Osetra caviar; or preserving fragile island coral reefs or tropical rainforests for future generations? Put your conscience first this season and your hard-earned holiday shopping dollars toward Seacology’s new Save An Acre program.

Just in time for the most wonderful time of the year, Seacology’s Save an Acre program offers the opportunity to help preserve island environments around the globe. For every tax-deductible $40 contribution to Save an Acre, donors choose to save either an acre of island coral reef or tropical rainforest, both of which are disappearing at an alarming rate.

“Seacology’s Save an Acre program is a great way to show your loved ones that you care this holiday season or on any other occasion such as a birthday or anniversary or to mark the passing of a loved one. Give a gift that will last — a protected acre of coral reef or tropical rainforest,” says Duane Silverstein, Seacology’s executive director.

Whatever the season, it’s always a good time to support Seacology’s efforts to preserve island biodiversity and culture. Founded in 1991 by world-renowned ethnobotanist Dr. Paul Alan Cox, Seacology offers win-win solutions that reward local communities with tangible benefits for their part in protecting their environments.

The Save an Acre program allows donors to fund one of two Seacology conservation projects:

  • The Sitio Lobo Rainforest on Mindanao Island in the Philippines, where 6,178 acres of watershed rainforest around Lake Sebu will be protected by the indigenous T’boli community. 
  • The Muri Coral Reef off Rarotonga in the Cook Islands, where a 413-acre marine conservation area will be established.

Save an Acre donors and recipients receive a personalized card of appreciation with a beautiful color photograph, as well as exclusive information about the location they helped preserve. Save an acre today and learn more about Seacology’s new program at seacology.org/saveanacre.

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