Skip to content

Recent Posts

  • Taxgirl Goes To The Movies: Star Wars
  • Looking For Tax Breaks?
  • Taxgirl Goes Back To The Movies In 2025
  • Here’s What You Need To Know About Submitting Tax Questions
  • Looking For More Great Tax Content?

Most Used Categories

  • individual (1,314)
  • politics (862)
  • IRS news/announcements (753)
  • tax policy (582)
  • ask the taxgirl (543)
  • prosecutions, felonies and misdemeanors (479)
  • just for fun (478)
  • state & local (403)
  • pop culture (399)
  • charitable organizations (389)
Skip to content

Taxgirl

Because paying taxes is painful… but reading about them shouldn’t be.

  • About Taxgirl
  • Info
    • My Disclaimer
    • A Word (or More) About Your Privacy
    • Subscribe
  • Ask The Taxgirl
  • Comments
  • Taxgirl Podcast
    • Podcast Season 1
    • Podcast Season 2
    • Podcast Season 3
  • Contact
  • Home
  • 2015
  • December
  • 25
  • 12 Days Of Charitable Giving (2015): Big Cats Initiative

12 Days Of Charitable Giving (2015): Big Cats Initiative

Kelly Phillips ErbDecember 25, 2015January 14, 2022

It’s the sixth day of my 12 Days of Charitable Giving. Readers have suggested deserving charities over the past few weeks and I’ll be posting one a day for – well, 12 days (I’m clever that way). Today’s charity is National Geographic’s Big Cats Initiative.

National Geographic’s Big Cats Initiative was founded in 2009 in an effort to halt the decline of big cats in the wild: today, as few as 3,000 tigers, 7,500 snow leopards, 10,000 cheetahs, and 30,000 lions likely remain in the wild. The decline occurs for a number of reasons, including a disappearing habitat and hunting expeditions (remember Cecil the Lion?).

The Big Cats Initiative attacks the problem in three ways:

  • The Big Cats Initiative assesses and maps current populations of big cats worldwide in order to best determine how to protect them. Click here to see the assessment of lion populations in Africa.
  • The Big Cats Initiative supports conservation projects where big cats live.
  • Finally, together with Nat Geo WILD, the Big Cats Initiative spreads the word about the decline of big cats in the wild through an awareness campaign called Cause an Uproar.

So how can you help?

To make a one-time donation via credit card, you can click over to the website. You can also make a recurring donation.

You can also sign up to participate in the Build a Boma campaign. Every dollar raised will go directly toward building and maintaining livestock enclosures called “bomas” in Kenya and Tanzania. A boma costs only $500 to build and $25 a year to maintain. It’s a proven way to decrease the killing of lions since protecting livestock from predation helps protect big cats from retaliatory killings. Donations to help build a bona can be one-time or recurring.

To find out more about the work of the organization, sign up to receive email updates here.

As always, you want to make sure that your donation is going to a qualified charitable organization. Like similar organizations, Big Cats Initiative can be found under an umbrella organization: in this case, it’s the National Geographic Society. A search using the IRS’ Exempt Organizations Select Check reveals that National Geographic Society is on the list. To find out more about the Big Cats Initiative, check out their website, like them on Facebook, or follow them on Twitter.

Remember: submissions to the 12 Days of Charitable Giving are made by readers and in most cases, I can’t personally vouch for the good work that these folks do. So be generous. But be smart. Do your homework.

For more on making charitable donations, check out this post.

For other charities in the series:

  • Wounded Warrior Project
  • PACT For Animals
  • Family Hope Foundation
  • Cops For Kids With Cancer
  • Liberty’s Promise
Facebooktwitterlinkedinmail
author avatar
Kelly Phillips Erb
Kelly Phillips Erb is a tax attorney, tax writer, and podcaster.
See Full Bio
social network icon social network icon
12 days of charitable giving, Big Cats Initiative

Post navigation

Previous: 12 Days Of Charitable Giving (2015): Liberty’s Promise
Next: 12 Days Of Charitable Giving (2015): Women’s Center & Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh

Related Posts

dollar bills

Taxpayers Can Learn From GoFundMe Scam

July 29, 2022August 7, 2022 Kelly Phillips Erb
hockey

12 Days Of Charitable Giving 2020: Halftime Gear

December 30, 2020December 30, 2020 Kelly Phillips Erb
baseball glove and balls

12 Days Of Charitable Giving 2020: On My Team 16

December 29, 2020December 29, 2020 Kelly Phillips Erb

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© 2005-2022, Kelly Phillips Erb | Theme: BlockWP by Candid Themes.
Skip to content
Open toolbar Accessibility Tools

Accessibility Tools

  • Increase TextIncrease Text
  • Decrease TextDecrease Text
  • GrayscaleGrayscale
  • High ContrastHigh Contrast
  • Negative ContrastNegative Contrast
  • Light BackgroundLight Background
  • Links UnderlineLinks Underline
  • Readable FontReadable Font
  • Reset Reset
  • SitemapSitemap
  • FeedbackFeedback