WWF Spain
WWF Spain is the Spanish section of the World Wide Fund for Nature, which is one of the world's largest organizations dedicated to the conservation of nature, with headquarters in more than 100 countries. Its mission is to halt the environmental degradation of the planet and build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, through the protection and conservation of biodiversity and the reduction of the ecological footprint.
Beginnings
The WWF was founded in 1961 with the main goal of raising funds and acting in the defense of endangered natural species around the world. One of the WWF's first and most ambitious goals was to buy land in Doñana to preserve the wild marshes from imminent industrialization.The Spanish section of WWF was created on 30 July 1968 under the name ADENA, which stands for Asociación para la Defensa de la Naturaleza. Naturalist Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente was one of its founders and served as its vice president until his death in 1980.
Rodríguez de la Fuente fought for the creation of natural and national parks, the protection of endangered species—such as wolves, the Eurasian griffon vulture, and the peregrine falcon. Thanks to him, it was possible to save the Tablas de Daimiel wetlands from drying out, to prevent the construction of an urban development in the Albufera de València, and to enforce the legal protection of the Doñana and Cabrera parks. Therefore, the creation of ADENA is closely linked to the creation of the Doñana National Park, one of the most biodiverse places in Europe. The organization later joined the WWF network and became known as WWF/Adena. Since 2009, it has been known as WWF Spain.
ADENA's way of working focuses on conservation projects on the ground and with local communities, seeking solutions to environmental problems, in contrast to the other major environmental organizations working in Spain, such as Greenpeace and Ecologists in Action, which work more on denunciation at a global and local scale, respectively. WWF's global logo, the giant panda, has become an icon that the public identifies with nature conservation.