Community Corner
Busch Gardens, SeaWorld Donates Record Amount For Conservation
The SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund has donated more than $17.5 million to 1,200 conservation organizations.
TAMPA, FL — The SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund announced a record-breaking milestone: $17.5 million has been granted to more than 1,200 animal rescue, research and conservation organizations worldwide since the fund's inception.
Started in 2003, SWBGCF's grants have supported impactful conservation projects – both grassroots efforts and large-scale collaborations – that align with the Fund's key focus areas of rescue and rehabilitation, conservation and education, habitat protection, and species research. In 2018, the SWBGCF awarded more than $1.2 million to 81 organizations around the world.
Project examples include:
Find out what's happening in Temple Terracefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- Rising Tide Conservation – recipient of more than $1.5 million from the fund to support the organization's mission of protecting reefs. The group is working to develop techniques for rearing marine ornamental fish and to promote commercial production in order to provide alternatives to reef collection. Guests at SeaWorld San Diego can learn more about this important initiative at the park's new Tidal Twister attraction.
- The Panamerican Conservation Association (APPC) – which has developed a successful record with the rescue, rehabilitation and release of thousands of animals like sloths and anteaters.
- Wilderness Foundation Africa—a program whose wide range of efforts in South Africa include the expansion of conservation areas and poaching intervention for various species, including the critically endangered black rhino.
"Funding from the SWBGCF has been instrumental in advancing many of the research breakthroughs in marine ornamental aquaculture over the past five years, including the growth of Rising Tide," said Matt DiMaggio, assistant professor of ornamental aquaculture at the University of Florida. "Successes such as the first ever culture of the Pacific Blue Tang and developing production protocols for species such the Cuban Hogfish and Reef Butterflyfish are critically important to help save our ocean's depleting reefs. These programs would not have been possible without the continued support of the SWBGCF and the collaborative efforts of all the participants in Rising Tide."
"Black rhinos are some of the most critically endangered animals on the planet. The SWBGCF supports a wide range of projects in the areas of species, spaces and people, including fixed wing aircraft to patrol key rhino protection areas and give air-to-ground support when there is an active poaching incident," said Andrew Muir, CEO of Wilderness Foundation Africa,
Find out what's happening in Temple Terracefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As a company, SeaWorld continues to create new opportunities for guests to get involved in helping animals and the planet, including a "round-up" program, encouraging guests to "round-up" their in-park purchase to the nearest dollar, with the full difference donated to the Fund. Donations can also be made at merchandise counters throughout the parks, or online.
"These programs – and all of the donations we receive on behalf of the Fund – show that every little bit counts towards helping save wildlife and wild places," said the fund's Rob Yordi. "We want park guests to be inspired and empowered by what they see and learn inside the parks, and then take that knowledge with them out into the world."
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
