Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Helping Africans navigate the transition to modernity with a huge, wonderful wildlife resource still intact.
At one point, I wanted to be a wildlife photographer. I also love to travel, so maybe I'd do travel writing.
No one is more keen than me to see the Hunting Act repealed, because I believe in the management of wildlife.
We humans still have a long way to go with learning to live harmoniously with our environment and its wildlife.
Part of what makes South Carolina so beautiful is the land we conserve for wildlife and for future generations.
My belief is that what comes across on the television is a capture of my enthusiasm and my passion for wildlife.
Our forests offer much more than just beautiful landscapes and wildlife. Each one has a different story to tell.
Yellowstone wildlife is treasured. We understand that. We'll manage them in a way that addresses that sensitivity.
I'm vice chairman of the American Wild Horse Protection Association and honorary chairman of the Wildlife Federation.
I am really sobered by what's happening to ecosystems around our planet and to the wildlife that is to be found there.
We have found ways to capture, kill and market ocean wildlife on an unprecedented scale. It's an absolute catastrophe.
The illegal wildlife trade has an unacceptable human cost for those who have lived for centuries in harmony with wildlife.
A lot of African wildlife is very big. If you're protecting the big stuff, you're usually protecting the small stuff, too.
Eating wildlife is probably not the smartest thing that we can do in terms of maintaining the integrity of natural systems.
Our lifestyle, our wildlife, our land and our water remain critical to our definition of Wyoming and to our economic future.
If we could just stop building up armies and things like that, we would have all the money we need for wildlife and poverty.
When wildlife damages agriculture we eliminate the wildlife. Rather we should eliminate agriculture when it damages wildlife.
I didn't want to be president of the World Wildlife Fund. I was asked to do it. I'd much rather have stayed in the navy, frankly.
Steve was so wonderful to bring wildlife into our living rooms and let us see that animals we used to be afraid of are so important.
In most of the world, we have only small remnants of the wildlife that once existed. Africa has the most astonishing wildlife still.
We have been far too aggressive about extracting ocean wildlife, not appreciating that there are limits and even points of no return.
Until the day comes when the senseless killing ends, we will all have to fight like wildlife warriors to protect our precious planet.
When I arrived on the planet, there were only two billion. Wildlife was more abundant, we were less so; now the situation is reversed.
When I was 16, I discovered wildlife. My father took me to a place called Algonquin Park in Northern Ontario - it has some 1,600 lakes.
I definitely have, on paper, an unorthodox career path. And from childhood onward, I was always fascinated by the outdoors and wildlife.
I am travelling to different places and talking to people about travelling litter-free, observing the wildlife, and respecting the host.
For me, Africa is a land of light and contrast. Black and white is the best way to express the solitary emotion and vitality of wildlife.
Mississippians for the most part appreciate U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service management of our wildlife refuges and other natural resources.
If we can teach people about wildlife, they will be touched. Share my wildlife with me. Because humans want to save things that they love.
We've evolved from sitting back on our tripods and shooting wildlife films like they have been shot historically, which doesn't work for us.
My job, my mission, the reason I’ve been put onto this planet, is to save wildlife. And I thank you for comin’ with me. Yeah, let’s get 'em!
All over the world the wildlife that I write about is in grave danger. It is being exterminated by what we call the progress of civilization.
If you can reach out and touch and love and be with wildlife, you will forever be changed, and you will want to make the world a better place.
I am not an enthusiast when it comes to cities, preferring rolling scenery, wildlife and stars to museums, monuments, architecture and traffic.
In real life, I am trying to save the Steve Irwin wildlife preserve. It's in Australia, up on Cape York, and it's in danger of being strip-mined.
If you can't excite people about wildlife, how can you convince them to love, cherish, and protect our wildlife and the environment they live in?
We are all consumers of wildlife. We may not realize it but there's probably something in your home or something you own that came from wildlife.
Walking is my main method of relaxation. I don't go over my lines or try to solve the world's problems, I just enjoy the scenery and the wildlife.
She's born and raised with wildlife, living with a zoo. What would be strange for Bindi is if she were in an apartment in suburbia with a goldfish.
I used to be frightened of the countryside after dark. Now I enjoy it. There is something wonderful about those strange country and wildlife noises.
Like the resource it seeks to protect, wildlife conservation must be dynamic, changing as conditions change, seeking always to become more effective.
I cannot in good conscience vote for final passage of legislation that would pave the way to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling.
To those who have always wondered how they might best serve the wider world, wildlife conservation is, at its core, one of the purest forms of giving.
Almost all these hotspots around the world, most have been destroyed to the point where there is no wildlife and very little of the natural world left.
My dad dedicated his life to getting across the wildlife message, and I love that I can carry on his legacy. I want to make sure his message never dies.
People need to look at wildlife conservation in its totality. As soon as you lose the apex predator, it has harmful consequences right down the food chain.
I first worked on sports photography, and it was until 2002, when I was already 32 years old, that I really started working and enjoying Africa's wildlife.
We are on parallel paths with the planet. The wants and needs of marine wildlife are our own: we want connection, companionship, a healthy clean environment.
I'm not an extreme tree-hugger. I do believe trees grow and are a useful agricultural product that can be harvested without damaging the ecology and wildlife.
When I worked with wildlife a lot in the Eighties and Nineties, I learnt the meaning of patience. And when I worked with trees, I learned the meaning of humility.