Author: Colossal Foundation

  • The Colossal Foundation Doubles Funding to $100 Million to Prevent Mass Extinctions

    The Colossal Foundation Doubles Funding to $100 Million to Prevent Mass Extinctions

    Non-profit arm of the de-extinction company secures an additional $50 million, expands global projects and partnerships, and releases its inaugural Impact Report detailing progress in the fight against species extinction.

    DALLAS, TX / ACCESS Newswire / December 17, 2025 / The Colossal Foundation, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit arm of Colossal Biosciences, today announced it has secured an additional $50 million in funding, bringing its total capital to $100 million since launching just over a year ago.The Foundation also released its inaugural Impact Report detailing the progress and measurable conservation outcomes from this past year. Established to deploy Colossal’s breakthrough de-extinction technologies to the front lines of the biodiversity crisis, the Foundation scales and accelerates partner-led efforts to protect wildlife, restore ecosystems, and build a resilient genetic safety net for species worldwide.

    In its inaugural year, the Foundation launched dozens of projects spanning six continents, supporting more than 40 species while collaborating with over 55 conservation, Indigenous, and academic organizations. The new funding will expand global conservation programs focused on critically endangered species, genetic rescue, wildlife monitoring, and species reintroduction efforts.

    “In just 12 months, we’ve doubled the Colossal Foundation’s funding, allowing us to massively expand our partners and projects-and deliver immediate impact for conservation,” said Ben Lamm, Colossal CEO and co-founder. “As our technology advances, our role is clear: move these tools into the hands of those on the front lines of biodiversity loss, and scale conservation innovation fast enough to matter.”

    With global wildlife populations declining nearly 70% and extinction rates exceeding natural levels by more than 100-fold, the Foundation’s expansion addresses a biodiversity funding gap exceeding $700 billion annually.

    “Traditional conservation remains essential but is no longer sufficient on its own. We are at a critical moment that demands seeing de-extinction and breakthrough biotechnologies not as fringe concepts, but as frontline strategies in the fight for biodiversity,” said Matt James, Executive Director of the Colossal Foundation.

    Major First-Year Achievements

    The Foundation’s 2025 Impact Report highlights breakthrough advances including cloning the world’s first red “ghost” wolves to restore genetic diversity to America’s most endangered canid; accelerating the world’s first mRNA vaccine for elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV); two elephants at the Cincinnati Zoo were vaccinated and later exposed to EEHV, recovering without signs of illness; deploying AI-powered acoustic monitoring across Yellowstone to decode wolf communication; launching the Species Reintroduction Fund in partnership with Re:wild, supporting six flagship species across six countries; and committing $3 million to engineer chytrid-resistant amphibians in response to the deadliest wildlife pandemic in vertebrate history.

    “This is the most detailed acoustic study of wild wolves ever conducted, and it’s only the beginning,” said Dan Stahler of the Yellowstone Wolf Project.

    “I have witnessed elephants battle EEHV and have even lost a juvenile elephant that was under my care,” said Matt James. “To be able to get a vaccine into the world that can stop this senseless loss means everything to me. This is why I joined Colossal.”

    Building on its secured $100 million, the Colossal Foundation will continue raising additional reserves to launch new projects and scale impact across more species over the next decade.

    VIEW THE IMPACT REPORT HERE

    About The Colossal Foundation

    The Colossal Foundation is a 501(c)(3) dedicated to supporting the use of cutting-edge technologies in conservation efforts globally to help prevent extinction of keystone species. The organization deploys de-extinction technologies and support to empower partners in the field to reverse the extinction crisis. For more information, visit www.ColossalFoundation.org.

    About Colossal Biosciences

    Colossal was founded by emerging technology and software entrepreneur Ben Lamm and world-renowned geneticist George Church, Ph.D., and is the first to apply CRISPR technology for the purposes of species de-extinction. Colossal creates innovative technologies for species restoration, critically endangered species protection, and the repopulation of critical ecosystems that support the continuation of life on Earth. Colossal is accepting humanity’s duty to restore Earth to a healthier state, while also solving for the future economies and biological necessities of the human condition through cutting-edge science and technologies. For more information, visit www.colossal.com.

    Media Contact:

    Emily@colossal.com

    SOURCE: Colossal Foundation

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Colossal Foundation Commits $500,000 to Restore Sacred Condor to Ancestral Nez Perce Skies

    Colossal Foundation Commits $500,000 to Restore Sacred Condor to Ancestral Nez Perce Skies

    Decade-long partnership supports tribally led effort to return North America’s largest land bird to Hells Canyon

    DALLAS, TX / ACCESS Newswire / December 12, 2025 / The Colossal Foundation, the 501(c)(3) charitable organization associated with Colossal, the de-extinction company, today announced a $500,000, ten-year commitment to the Nez Perce Tribe’s Wildlife Division to advance the recovery and reintroduction of the Critically Endangered California condor (Gymnogyps californianus), known in the Nez Perce language as qú’nes.

    With a wingspan of nearly 10 feet, the California condor is North America’s largest land bird. By 1982, its population had fallen to just 22 birds due to habitat loss, lead poisoning, and other human-caused threats. Today roughly 560 condors exist, about 360 in the wild.

    For the first time in over 125 years, qú’nes is poised to return to its northernmost range as soon as 2031. Led by the Nez Perce Tribe (Nimíipuu), this historic reintroduction aims to restore a species that is both ecologically essential and culturally sacred, establishing the first Inland Northwest population.

    “Since time immemorial, the Nimíipuu (Nez Perce) people and qú’nes (condor) have shared this landscape,” said Eric Kash Kash, Director of the Nez Perce Tribe Wildlife Division. “Its return represents both ecological restoration and spiritual renewal for our people and the land.”

    Since 2016, the Tribe’s Wildlife Division has conducted rigorous assessments confirming that the Hells Canyon ecoregion provides ideal habitat for a reintroduced condor population. This scientific work complements traditional ecological knowledge reflected in the naming of a local canyon as ananasocum, meaning “the place where condors used to be” in the Nez Perce language.

    Colossal Foundation’s investment will accelerate the final, critical phase: completing reintroduction plans, scaling the “Get the Lead Out” campaign to guarantee a lead-free food web, and strengthening local capacity through hiring and training dedicated tribal biologists.

    “The Nez Perce are leading one of the most visionary species recovery projects in North America,” said Matt James, Chief Animal Officer at Colossal Biosciences and Executive Director of the Colossal Foundation. “Their leadership demonstrates how cultural knowledge and cutting-edge science together can reweave the living fabric of ecosystems.”

    The project is further strengthened by INDIGENOUS LED, a founding member of Colossal’s Indigenous Council dedicated to advancing Indigenous-led conservation. This collaboration builds on the Colossal Foundation’s Species Reintroduction Fund and reaffirms Colossal’s partnership with the Nez Perce Tribe, who sit on Colossal’s Indigenous Council.

    About the Colossal Foundation

    The Colossal Foundation is a 501(c)(3) dedicated to supporting the use of cutting-edge technologies for conservation efforts globally to help prevent extinction of keystone species. Learn more at www.ColossalFoundation.org

    About the Nez Perce Tribe Wildlife Division

    The Nez Perce Tribe Wildlife Division works to protect, restore, and enhance fish and wildlife resources. Grounded in the cultural values of the Nimíipuu, the Division utilizes the best available science and traditional ecological knowledge to manage species and habitats within the Tribe’s ancestral homelands.

    About INDIGENOUS LED

    INDIGENOUS LED was founded by Indigenous People for Indigenous People to elevate the power of Indigenous-led conservation to address our planetary and relationship crises.

    Press Contacts:

    Colossal / Emily@colossal.com

    Thinkerbell / colossal@thinkerbell.com

    SOURCE: Colossal Foundation

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire