Plant Trees for the Orca

One Dollar. One Tree.

For millennia, the endangered Southern Resident Orca have inhabited the Pacific Ocean from Northern California to British Columbia where salmon numbers continue to decline, impacting the orca. Learn more

With your help, we will:

  • Conserve salmon spawning grounds
  • Decrease water contamination & toxicity
  • Restore habitat by planting trees along rivers & streams
  • Every year, as the orca migrate North to South and back again they rely on the West Coast Chinook salmon for food (nearly 80% of their diet). Planting trees along rivers and streams of the Pacific Northwest restores habitat for the endangered orca. Trees help reduce pollution and improve the health and quantity of salmon for the orca to eat. Learn more about how trees, salmon, and orca are all connected in our blog story.
  • Our amazing partners across the Pacific Northwest have identified critical forested areas that need to be restored in order to have the greatest possible impact on the well-being of the southern resident orca. Planting trees around the rivers and streams that feed into the orca's habitat reduces water contamination, lowers toxicity, protects salmon spawning grounds, and improves orca food supply. These projects will bring benefits to other species of wildlife, as well as the communities in the surrounding areas.
  • A personalized tree certificate (see gallery) to say thanks for your donation. We'll also send you reports on our orca project, so you can track the impact your trees are having on the community and environment.
  • Our partner has chosen trees and vegetation that will bring the greatest overall benefit to the region, the salmon, and the southern resident orca.
1 20 50 100
$ USD

Looking to plant trees every month? Join The Grove.

For millennia, the endangered Southern Resident Orca have inhabited the Pacific Ocean from Northern California to British Columbia where salmon numbers continue to decline, impacting the orca. Learn more

With your help, we will:

  • Conserve salmon spawning grounds
  • Decrease water contamination & toxicity
  • Restore habitat by planting trees along rivers & streams
  • Every year, as the orca migrate North to South and back again they rely on the West Coast Chinook salmon for food (nearly 80% of their diet). Planting trees along rivers and streams of the Pacific Northwest restores habitat for the endangered orca. Trees help reduce pollution and improve the health and quantity of salmon for the orca to eat. Learn more about how trees, salmon, and orca are all connected in our blog story.
  • Our amazing partners across the Pacific Northwest have identified critical forested areas that need to be restored in order to have the greatest possible impact on the well-being of the southern resident orca. Planting trees around the rivers and streams that feed into the orca's habitat reduces water contamination, lowers toxicity, protects salmon spawning grounds, and improves orca food supply. These projects will bring benefits to other species of wildlife, as well as the communities in the surrounding areas.
  • A personalized tree certificate (see gallery) to say thanks for your donation. We'll also send you reports on our orca project, so you can track the impact your trees are having on the community and environment.
  • Our partner has chosen trees and vegetation that will bring the greatest overall benefit to the region, the salmon, and the southern resident orca.

in Partnership with:

Promise the Pod - Restoring habitat to save our orcas

Why Plant Trees for the Orcas?

Restore Salmon Habitat

Restore Salmon Habitat

Chinook salmon swim upstream to spawn. Building up the health of the ecosystem around the banks of the rivers ensures there is proper habitat for the fish to reproduce.

Improve Soil Health

Improve Soil Health

Trees improve soil health by stabilizing the bans, absorbing water, and building stability with their root structures. Ensuring soil is stable and has nutrients is critical to restoring forest health.

Protect the Endangered Orca

Protect the Endangered Orca

With only 75 individuals left, the Southern Resident Orcas are at their lowest numbers in over 30 years. Tree planting protects their primary food source and reduces habitat contamination.

Forest Coverage in the Pacific Northwest

Forest Coverage in the Pacific Northwest

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Plant Trees for Community
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Group of people in the Andes
Group of people in India
Community tree certificate
Happy group in Rwanda
Trees on a persons back in the Andes
Woman with trees on her head in India
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Want to give more?

Help spread the word and get more trees planted!

Start An Orca Fundraiser