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DAF Giving 

Donor-Advised Fund gifts are welcomed and can support wildlife rescue, rehabilitation, release and conservation programs in Laos.

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​EIN: 92-3166871

501(c)(3) Public Charity

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Protect Wildlife Everyday

$5,000 | Rescue Wildlife in Crisis

The problem: Every year, endangered animals are confiscated from wildlife traffickers or surrendered after being kept illegally as pets. Without immediate intervention, many will not survive.

Our solution: LCTW deploys rescue teams, provides emergency veterinary care and begins rehabilitation to prepare animals for a future return to the wild.

The impact: Your support can help cover emergency rescues, transport, food and medical treatment for newly admitted animals, giving them a second chance at life.

$10,000 | Restore Animals to Health

The problem: Rescued wildlife often arrives injured, malnourished, traumatised or suffering from disease.

Our solution: LCTW provides specialised veterinary care, species-appropriate diets, behavioural rehabilitation and long-term monitoring.

The impact: Your gift helps ensure rescued animals receive the expert care needed to recover and become candidates for release back into protected habitats.

$25,000 | Keep Wildlife Rescue Running for One Month

The problem: Wildlife conservation depends on far more than rescue missions. Animals require daily care, specialised diets, veterinary supplies, trained staff and secure facilities.

Our solution: LCTW operates one of Laos' leading wildlife rescue and rehabilitation programmes, responding to wildlife trafficking cases nationwide.

The impact: A gift of $25,000 supports approximately one month of essential operations, including animal food, veterinary supplies, keeper salaries, rescue missions and daily care for dozens of rescued animals.

Current results: More than 426 animals rescued and over 346 returned to the wild.

$50,000 | Double Wildlife's Chance of Survival

The problem: Demand for wildlife rescue continues to grow as law enforcement agencies increasingly confiscate trafficked animals.

Our solution: LCTW expands rescue capacity, strengthens veterinary services and increases rehabilitation and release efforts.

The impact: Your support can sustain approximately two months of wildlife rescue operations, allowing more animals to be saved, treated and prepared for release.

$100,000 | Become a Wildlife Conservation Partner

The problem: Long-term conservation requires stable funding that allows organisations to plan beyond immediate emergencies.

Our solution: LCTW combines wildlife rescue, rehabilitation, release, conservation research and community engagement to protect threatened species across Laos.

The impact: Major philanthropic support helps secure the future of our conservation programmes and creates lasting benefits for wildlife, ecosystems and local communities.

$300,000+ | Strategic Conservation Partnership

The problem: Wildlife trafficking, habitat loss and declining biodiversity threaten Laos' unique ecosystems and countless endangered species.

Our solution: LCTW integrates wildlife rescue, species recovery, habitat conservation, community engagement and capacity building into a comprehensive conservation model.

The impact: Strategic partners help secure an entire year of conservation action, enabling measurable outcomes for wildlife, protected areas and local communities across Laos.

Species Recovery Opportunities

Laos' First Post-Release Monitoring Program for the Lao Langur

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$25,000 | Giving Laos' Rarest Primate a Future in the Wild

The Problem: The Lao Langur is one of the world's least-known primates and is found nowhere else on Earth. While rescued individuals can be rehabilitated and released, little is known about their long-term survival, movements and adaptation after returning to the wild. Without this information, conservation efforts cannot be fully evaluated or improved.

Our Solution: LCTW is launching Laos' first post-release monitoring program for rehabilitated Lao Langurs. Using field surveys, direct observation and GPS tracking technology where appropriate, we will monitor released individuals, assess their behaviour and habitat use, and identify threats affecting their survival.

The Impact: Your support will help generate the first scientific data on the survival and recovery of released Lao Langurs in Laos. The project will improve future rehabilitation and release protocols, strengthen conservation planning and contribute directly to the long-term recovery of this unique and endangered species.

Bring Back the Siamese Crocodile

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$50,000 | Restore a Critically Endangered Predator

The problem: The Siamese Crocodile has disappeared from most of its historic range and survives only in small, fragmented populations.

Our solution: LCTW is supporting ecological assessments, habitat restoration and community engagement to prepare for future conservation actions and reintroduction efforts in suitable wetlands.

The impact: Your gift helps restore critical wetland ecosystems while laying the foundation for the recovery of one of Southeast Asia's rarest reptiles.

Protect the Sunda Pangolin

$30,000 | Protecting the World's Most Trafficked Mammal Beyond Release

The problem: The Sunda Pangolin is the most heavily trafficked mammal on Earth. Every year, animals rescued from the illegal wildlife trade are rehabilitated and released, but their survival remains threatened by poaching, snaring and habitat disturbance. Without long-term monitoring and local protection, conservation gains can quickly be lost.

Our solution: LCTW combines post-release monitoring with community-based conservation to ensure rescued pangolins have the best possible chance of survival. Released individuals are tracked to assess their adaptation and movements, while local communities are engaged to reduce threats, report illegal activities and protect key habitats.

The impact: Your support will help establish one of Laos' leading pangolin recovery initiatives, generating critical data on post-release survival while building local stewardship for pangolin conservation. The project aims to improve long-term survival rates, strengthen anti-poaching efforts and create safer landscapes for this critically endangered species.

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