About our work
Despite covering only about 0.8 percent of the Earth’s surface, freshwater habitats support a disproportionately large amount of unique aquatic life – more than 10 percent of all known animals and about 50 percent of all fish species on the planet. Freshwater ecosystems also provide several critical services for our planet – supporting food production, human health, water purification, climate regulation and more. These same vital freshwater systems are the most imperilled ecosystems on the Earth and face a growing list of challenges like pollution, habitat loss, overexploitation, fragmentation (e.g., dams and culverts) and the climate crisis. Ìý
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For decades, Shedd Aquarium has committed to sparking compassion, curiosity and conservation for the aquatic world. Through the Center for Species Survival Freshwater, Shedd will implement the Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûÏÖ³¡Ö±²¥ Assess-Plan-Act model to assess extinction risk, identify conservation needs, help plan effective and coordinated measures, and mobilize action in alliance with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Species Survival Commission (Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûÏÖ³¡Ö±²¥ SSC), its Freshwater Conservation Committee (FCC), relevant government and non-government partners, and the wider conservation community. Shedd will work towards combating the current trend of freshwater biodiversity loss, prioritizing conservation planning, and mobilizing key actions and policy implementation across local and regional scales. Ìý
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The Center for Species Survival Freshwater will empower Shedd to advance its ongoing freshwater conservation efforts in biodiversity hotspots. Shedd’s collaborative work will initially focus on critical watersheds in Central America, where aquatic wildlife populations are at risk of extinction. Leveraging the aquarium’s existing portfolio of freshwater research, one attention area for the Shedd will be on freshwater mussels — animals that face the highest level of threat on the planet. Shedd will replicate its ongoing freshwater mussels research, currently conducted throughout the Midwest in the U.S., and scale it across key areas of Central America — including El Salvador, Costa Rica and Guatemala. Ìý
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Shedd’s work with in-country stakeholders, including conservation organizations, universities, government agencies, and students, is intentional to ensure that these conservation endeavors are done equitably and built to last. Shedd is also proud to partner with iconic Chicago conservation and science institutions like The Field Museum of Natural History and The Morton Arboretum to maximize our impact and make key connections between aquatic and terrestrial conservation.