Earthroots

Earthroots

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A grassroots environmental organization dedicated to the protection of Ontario's species and spaces

Earthroots has been on the front lines of wilderness conservation since 1986 when our predecessor organization, the Temagami Wilderness Society (TWS), was formed. The TWS was created to fight for the preservation of rare old-growth red and white pine forests in the Temagami region of northern Ontario. After campaign success in Temagami, we changed our name to Earthroots (1991) and broadened our ma

06/23/2026

In a groundbreaking move, the small Quebec town of Terrasse-Vaudreuil has become the first municipality in Canada to officially recognize trees as living beings with inherent rights.

On June 9, the town council unanimously adopted a resolution declaring that trees deserve protection, including the right to life, natural growth, integrity, and regeneration.

This decision aligns the community with the Universal Declaration of the Rights of the Tree, an international initiative promoted by environmental groups.

Mayor Michel Bourdeau credited Quebec filmmaker André Desrochers and his documentary for inspiring residents by highlighting how trees breathe, communicate through root systems, and function like living entities essential to human survival.

The resolution requires the town to review bylaws to prioritize tree preservation, mandating replacements when removals are unavoidable, and plans include distributing trees for residents to plant.

Bourdeau emphasized trees as vital green infrastructure that combat urban heat islands, purify air, manage water, and support biodiversity.

With about 2,000 residents nestled in wooded areas and recent experience with climate-driven flooding, the community views trees as their strongest ally against environmental challenges.

Proponents, including nature rights advocates, see this as part of a global movement granting legal personhood to natural elements, similar to rights given to rivers elsewhere.

While symbolic, the step signals growing recognition of ecosystems' intrinsic value.

Source: CBC News

06/22/2026

Eyes in the Forest.

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06/18/2026

From our Eyes in the Forest Cameras…

06/18/2026

"More than 4,000 pages of internal government correspondence, obtained by the Star via freedom-of-information legislation, showed that while Kinross has enjoyed close and constant access to the Ford government, Grassy Narrows has been sidelined, even as research shows wastewater from the proposed mine site could exacerbate the effects of industrial mercury already polluting the river that feeds the community."

Ontario NDP and Democracy Watch file complaints to the integrity commissioner over former Ford staffer's involvement in the Kinross mine.

06/17/2026

Introducing the Earthroots Store, a new way to support wilderness protection while bringing home something meaningful.

Discover a limited collection of T-shirts and sweatshirts featuring original artwork by renowned wilderness artist and Earthroots co-founder Hap Wilson. Every purchase helps strengthen our work to protect Ontario’s forests, wildlife, and wild places.

Quantities are limited, so don’t miss your chance to own these unique designs and wear your passion for conservation with pride. Shop today at https://www.earthroots.org/category/all-products.

06/04/2026

A flash of red in the forest.
This red fox was captured by one of our Eyes in the Forest wildlife cameras as it moved through Ontario's wilderness. Intelligent, adaptable and endlessly fascinating, foxes play an important role in keeping forest ecosystems healthy and balances.
Every wildlife sighting is a reminder of why protecting wild habitat matters.

06/03/2026

A road can be built in weeks. An old-growth forest takes centuries.

Temagami’s ancient pine forests survived fire, storms, and generations of change. Today, the greatest threat comes from short-term industrial pressure and the slow fragmentation of wilderness.

Every protected hectare matters! Every intact shoreline matters! Every old pine matters!

We still have the opportunity to keep Temagami wild but only if we choose protection over exploitation.

06/02/2026

Caught on our Eyes in the Forest wildlife camera. A deer letting loose and playing in the forest like nobody's watching. Moments like these remind us that Ontario's wild spaces are full of life, wonder and personalities all their own. Every patch of protected forest gives wildlife the freedom to simply be wild.

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Address


401 Richmond Street W. , Suite 412
Toronto, ON
M5V3A8