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Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Earth Rangers Bring back the Wild: Save the Gray Fox - YouTube
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Earth Rangers is a Canadian environmental education and conservation non-profit aimed specifically at youth. The goal of the organization is to educate children and their families about biodiversity, inspire them to adopt sustainable behaviours, and empower them to become directly involved in protecting animals and their habitats. Earth Rangers currently has more than 140,000 members across Canada, and visits 800 elementary schools every year with an educational live animal show.


Video Earth Rangers



History

Founded in 2004, Earth Rangers began as a local organization serving schools and community venues across the Greater Toronto Area. In 2011 the organization expanded across Canada, and since then has grown into a national organization of more than 40 staff and hundreds of volunteers.


Maps Earth Rangers



Membership

Earth Rangers is the largest conservation organization in Canada by membership, with more than 140,000 Earth Rangers Members in every province and territory.

Children can become an Earth Rangers Member by visiting the Earth Rangers website and registering for membership with parental permission. They are then sent a welcome package in the mail that includes their own personalized membership card, and gain access to online resources and environmentally-themed activities.


The Earth Rangers App - YouTube
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Programs

School Outreach

The Earth Rangers School Assembly is a presentation for Grades 1 to 6 that leverages the shared and innate connection children of all backgrounds have to animals. Through the power of live animal demonstrations, and positive, science-based information, the program educates students about the importance of protecting biodiversity, while highlighting diverse conservation initiatives across Canada. Throughout the show, students are introduced to four of the Earth Rangers Animal Ambassadors, such as Blue the Peregrine Falcon, Shelley the Painted Turtle, and Hudson the Eurasian Lynx. The program visits more than 800 schools across Canada each year.

Earth Rangers also delivers hands-on, curriculum-linked Classroom Visits for Grades 3 to 6, which explore subjects like climate change, pollination, and wildlife habitats in more depth.

Bring Back the Wild

Each year, Earth Rangers works with conservation partners to identify Canadian species that are facing threats in the wild. The organization then develops tangible projects to protect those animals, ranging from conservation research, to land acquisition, to habitat stewardship. Earth Rangers Members are encouraged to select one of the animals and start a fundraising campaign to help them. Through the program, members learn about the full breadth and depth of conservation and are given the tools to make a meaningful contribution. Throughout the year, they are provided with updates on the project, ensuring that they know how their funds were used and what was accomplished with them and by them its was that they rescue animals.

Missions

Missions are fun, tangible activities Earth Rangers provides to members throughout the year that are designed to demonstrate the collective impact of working together to protect the environment. They address a wide range of issues and provide kids with ways to take action through things like conserving energy at home, organizing shoreline cleanups and planting pollinator gardens. Missions are also designed to be completed with the help of family and friends.The goal of this program is to educate and inspire children about biodiversity loss.


Preview of the WotWots and Earth Rangers
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Facility

The Earth Rangers Centre is an advanced green building, certified LEED Platinum for Existing Buildings and Gold for New species.

The Earth Rangers Centre is located in Woodbridge, Ontario on the grounds of the Kortright Centre for Conservation. It is home to Earth Rangers' staff and Animal Ambassadors, and is a showcase of leading edge sustainable building technology including energy metering, smart automation and controls, innovative water and wastewater management, solar generation, green roof, geothermal heating and cooling.

Ventiliation

The Earth Rangers Centre was one of the first buildings in Canada to use displacement ventilation, and has the largest installation of earth tubes in North America. This ventilation system circulates air through diffusers located near the floor level and displaces the existing air into return ducts near the ceiling.

Data Centre

The Earth Rangers 9.3 square metre data centre was completed in December 2008. The data room uses storage servers from Pillar, Dell's processing servers, and virtual personal machines using VMware View software. Nortel's Power over Ethernet (PoE) switching facilitates the transfer of electrical power and data across the infrastructure. Earth Rangers also participates in Compugen's Green4Good program which works to combat the environmental impact of end-of-life technology products and support charities in need.

Solar Electricity

The Earth Rangers Centre has two solar photovoltaic (PV) arrays in operation; both convert the sun's rays into standard voltage to be used by the building's systems. In the Earth Rangers Centre parking lot there is a 57.6 kWp dual-axis tracking array on six separate posts consisting of 54 Solgate 175 W panels, provided by Sentinel Power Systems. Each array follows the sun from east to west during the day, increasing output by up to 30 per cent over a fixed panel. Each panel has its own Enphase micro-inverter, further increasing the efficiency of the arrays and allowing real-time monitoring of the system on panel by panel basis. The second array is located on the aviary, a building that boasts a 28.08 kWp, designed and installed by Enviro-Energy Technologies Inc. This offsets approximately 10% of the Earth Rangers Centre's annual needs.

Heating and Cooling

The Earth Rangers Centre was one of the first 100% radiant heated and cooled buildings in North America. The building uses 22 km of REHAU radiant tubing, which was laid within the concrete floors and ceiling. The flow of a non-toxic, vegetable-based liquid (water/glycol) through these tubes causes the concrete to become thermally activated. In the warm seasons, cooled liquid is supplied to the concrete slabs. The heat from the computers, people and the sun is absorbed by the concrete, causing the cooled liquid in the tubing to warm up. The liquid is then cooled by rejecting heat to the ground source system or free cooled by directly coupling to the cooling tower. In the colder months, the glycol is warmed by the ground source heat pump before it is supplied to the slab system.


Help Protect the Swift Fox - YouTube
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Animal ambassadors

The Earth Rangers Centre houses over 40 animals that act as Animal Ambassadors for the organization, including ring-tailed lemurs, red foxes, bald eagles, African servals, and American kestrels.


Welcome back to school everyone! Earth Rangers' School Show Team ...
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Awards

Earth Rangers

  • 2014 Interactive Media Awards, Best in Class Children's Website
  • 2014 Interactive Media Awards, Outstanding Achievement Nonprofit
  • 2014 Interactive Media Awards, Outstanding Achievement Animals/Wildlife
  • 2013 Interactive Media Awards, Outstanding Achievement Nonprofit
  • 2013 Interactive Media Awards, Outstanding Achievement Animals/Wildlife
  • 2013 Parent's Choice Award, Website Category
  • 2012 Interactive Media Awards, Best in Class Nonprofit
  • 2012 Interactive Media Awards, Best in Class Animals/Wildlife
  • 2012 Digi Award, Best Community Campaign
  • 2012 Mom's Choice Award
  • 2012 Environmental Education and Communication (EECOM) Awards, Outstanding EE Membership Organization
  • 2010 Interactive Media Awards, Best in Class Animals/Wildlife

Earth Rangers Centre

  • 2012 LEED for Existing Buildings: Operations and Maintenance Platinum

Earth Rangers Presentation - YouTube
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References


Birthday Kit Previews | Earth Rangers Wild Wire Blog
src: www.earthrangers.com


External links

  • EarthRangers.com - Member website
  • EarthRangers.org - Organization website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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