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Our latest edition

For Spring 2025, we expose the cruel reality of horse soring, share how we’re improving animal care in Bolivia, India and Canada, dive into the secret lives of misunderstood animals, help you plan an animal-friendly trip to New Orleans and more. Plus, check out our crossword for animal lovers!

Two women sit outside a vet clinic, holding a dog.

Victoria Grupp/Humane World for Animals

A team member visits a clinic in La Paz, Bolivia.

A world of compassion

In the first part of this series, we share the ways we’re partnering with local communities to enhance access to care.

An illustration of a pigeon standing in the middle of a city street.

Rachel Stern/Humane World for Animals

The secret lives of misunderstood animals

Snakes, pigeons and other animals often get a bad rap. Here’s why we should revisit these misjudged animals.

Rescuer Amanda Wallace holds a rabbit for a veterinary exam.

Meredith Lee/Humane World for Animals

Rescuer Amanda Wallace holds a rabbit for a veterinary exam.

Over 100 rabbits rescued from dire situation in Tennessee home

When an overwhelmed caregiver asked for help, Humane World and other animal nonprofits stepped in to save dozens of rabbits.

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Magazines
open gate leading into a lush green garden
Wildlife protection
Wild by design

Homeowners usually focus more on readying properties for resale than nurturing a home for other species. Research reveals that even when people want to garden ecologically, the desire to match the Joneses’ sterile turfgrass yard is a more powerful draw. Here's how to garden for wildlife without upsetting your neighbors.

brown rabbit in the grass
Wildlife protection
Gardening with rabbits

Coexisting with these shy plant-eaters is easier than you think.

hummingbirds sipping nectar from bright red flowers
Wildlife protection
Beyond the tulip

Though they’re often celebrated as harbingers of spring and rebirth, commoditized tulips are too overbred to welcome pollinators and too prized as decorative possessions to be shared with larger wildlife. Trade garden-variety bulbs for wildlife-friendly plants.

a bluebird sits on a tree with a loud weed whacker in background
Wildlife protection
Let’s go make some quiet

Studies are beginning to show why it might be best to turn down the volume.

Butterfly and bee in a humane backyard in Maryland
Wildlife protection
Beyond the backyard

Every outdoor space, whether a transformed city plot or a suburban pocket prairie, matters to animals. Here’s how to reclaim land for wildlife well beyond your own backyard.

Turtle crossing the rural road
Wildlife protection
Roadside assistance

Millions of animals die in the road. How can we help?

All Animals Spring 2025 issue cover

Humane World for Animals

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