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  • African fish eagle,Africa,African,Eagle,Fish Eagle,eagles,bird of prey,Haliaeetus vocifer,perched,perch,perching,branch,tree,endemic,blue sky,animal,animals,wildlife,Nature,Lake Kariba,Zimbabwe,wild,outdoor,large,beautiful,blue,predator,southern africa,carnivore,avian,old world,fauna,raptor,ornithology,bird watching,accipitridae,accipitriformes,bird,birds,day,freshwater,haliaeetus,nobody,protected area,reserve,river eagle,sea eagle,water,waterhole,ebartov
    BT_Eagle_EYL08042.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5663.jpg
  • female and young Onager (Equus hemionus). Part of a breeding nucleus of Wild Asian Asses at a reacclimation centre Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve, Israel
    BT_onager_025.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5795.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5693.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5821.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5823.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5694.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5695.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5684.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5615.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5464.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5444.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5334.jpg
  • female and young Onager (Equus hemionus). Part of a breeding nucleus of Wild Asian Asses at a reacclimation centre Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve, Israel
    BT_onager_026.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5467.jpg
  • A group of young naked Bushmen children playing near their huts. Photographed in Namibia
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5472.jpg
  • female and young Onager (Equus hemionus). Part of a breeding nucleus of Wild Asian Asses at a reacclimation centre Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve, Israel
    BT_onager_022.jpg
  • Adventure cruise passengers on a rubber zodiac dingy tour an iceberg in Spitsbergen, Norway in July
    BT_ZODIAC-3.JPG
  • Bullet ant or Conga ant (Paraponera clavata). The sting is one of the most painful of any stinging insect. Some victims compared the pain to that of being shot, hence its name. Photographed in Costa Rica
    Bullet_Ant_EYL05557.jpg
  • pale-billed woodpecker (Campephilus guatemalensis) is a very large woodpecker that is a resident breeding bird from northern Mexico to western Panama. Photographed in Costa Rica.
    BT_Woodpecker_DSC03826.jpg
  • pale-billed woodpecker (Campephilus guatemalensis) is a very large woodpecker that is a resident breeding bird from northern Mexico to western Panama. Photographed in Costa Rica.
    BT_Woodpecker_DSC03798.jpg
  • pale-billed woodpecker (Campephilus guatemalensis) is a very large woodpecker that is a resident breeding bird from northern Mexico to western Panama. Photographed in Costa Rica.
    BT_Woodpecker_DSC03797.jpg
  • Streak-headed woodcreeper (Lepidocolaptes souleyetii). Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Woodcreeper_EYL06693.jpg
  • Tailless whip scorpion (Order Amblypygi) on the bark of a tree. Amblypygids are a group of tropical arachnids. They are carnivorous, and are usually nocturnal hunters. Photographed in a tropical forest in Costa Rica.
    BT_Whip-Scorpions_EYL05568.jpg
  • whaling hut on remote arctic coast in summer. Ahlstrandhalvoya, Bellsund, Spitsbergen, Svalbard archipelago, Norway, Scandinavia
    BT_whaling-hut_DSC04719.jpg
  • whaling hut on remote arctic coast in summer. Ahlstrandhalvoya, Bellsund, Spitsbergen, Svalbard archipelago, Norway, Scandinavia
    BT_whaling-hut_DSC04692.jpg
  • Atlantic walrus (Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus). This large, gregarious relative of the seal has tusks that can reach a metre in length. Both the male (bulls) and female (cows) have tusks; the bulls use them in displays and fights when competing for dominance and access to cows. Both males and females use tusks to haul themselves onto ice or to create breathing holes. The walrus has inflatable pockets on either side of its oesophagus which it can fill with up to 50 litres of air for buoyancy. It dives to the ocean floor to feed on mussels, crabs, snails and starfish. The Atlantic walrus is found in two separate areas to the east and west of Greenland. Photographed in Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Norway
    BT_Walrus_EYL03265.jpg
  • Hoffman's two-toed sloth (Choloepus hoffmanni) feeding in Manuel Antonio National Park in Costa Rica
    BT_Two-Toed--Sloth_EYL08109.jpg
  • thick-billed murre or Brunnich's guillemot (Uria lomvia) in a fight. This coastal sea-bird is native to northern latitudes of Europe, Asia and North America. It feeds mainly on fish and breeds in large colonies on cliff-sides. Photographed in Spitsbergen, Norway in July.
    BT_Thick-billed-murre_EYL01957.jpg
  • The blue-gray tanager (Thraupis episcopus) is a medium-sized South American songbird of the tanager family, Thraupidae. Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Tanager_EYL05249.jpg
  • female and baby Geoffroy's spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) in a treetop. Also known as the black-handed spider monkey, is a species of spider monkey, a type of New World monkey, from Central America. Photographed in Costa Rica
    BT_spider-monkey_EYL07967.jpg
  • female and baby Geoffroy's spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) in a treetop. Also known as the black-handed spider monkey, is a species of spider monkey, a type of New World monkey, from Central America. Photographed in Costa Rica
    BT_spider-monkey_EYL07959.jpg
  • A male Svalbard Reindeer (rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) on the tundra in summer with his antlers still in velvet. This herbivorous mammal is the smallest subspecies of reindeer. It lives for approximately nine years and is endemic to the islands of Svalbard. Photographed in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. in July
    BT_Reindeer_EYL03549.jpg
  • A male Svalbard Reindeer (rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) on the tundra in summer with his antlers still in velvet. This herbivorous mammal is the smallest subspecies of reindeer. It lives for approximately nine years and is endemic to the islands of Svalbard. Photographed in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. in July
    BT_Reindeer_EYL03482.jpg
  • A male Svalbard Reindeer (rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) on the tundra in summer with his antlers still in velvet. This herbivorous mammal is the smallest subspecies of reindeer. It lives for approximately nine years and is endemic to the islands of Svalbard. Photographed in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. in July
    BT_Reindeer_EYL03439.jpg
  • Juvenile polar bear cub (Ursus maritimus) in Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Norway
    BT_polar-bear_EYL03092.jpg
  • Female polar bear (Ursus maritimus) in Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Norway
    BT_polar-bear_EYL03064.jpg
  • Two Orange-chinned Parakeets (Brotogeris jugularis) perched on a branch, interacting, Photographed in the wild, Costa Rica, Central America.
    BT_Parakeet_EYL06326.jpg
  • Nesting colony of Thick-billed murre or Brunnich's guillemot (Uria lomvia)  at Aalkefjellet Hinlopenstretet Spitsbergen, Svalbard, home to over 60,000 pairs in July. This coastal seabird is native to northern latitudes of Europe, Asia and North America. It feeds mainly on fish and breeds in large colonies on cliff-sides. Photographed in July in Norway's Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic.
    BT_Murre_EYL01945.jpg
  • Nesting colony of Thick-billed murre or Brunnich's guillemot (Uria lomvia)  at Aalkefjellet Hinlopenstretet Spitsbergen, Svalbard, home to over 60,000 pairs in July. This coastal seabird is native to northern latitudes of Europe, Asia and North America. It feeds mainly on fish and breeds in large colonies on cliff-sides. Photographed in July in Norway's Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic.
    BT_Murre_EYL01943.jpg
  • Martial Eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) Feeding on a helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris).  Martial eagles are the largest eagles in Africa. They soar over the plains and scrublands of sub-Saharan Africa, hunting everything from gamebirds, snakes and lizards, to jackal, domestic goats and mammals as large as small antelopes. Martial eagles reach around 80 centimetres in length and patrol a territory of about 130 square kilometres.
    BT_Martial-eagle_IA8A4961.jpg
  • Martial Eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) Feeding on a helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris).  Martial eagles are the largest eagles in Africa. They soar over the plains and scrublands of sub-Saharan Africa, hunting everything from gamebirds, snakes and lizards, to jackal, domestic goats and mammals as large as small antelopes. Martial eagles reach around 80 centimetres in length and patrol a territory of about 130 square kilometres.
    BT_Martial-eagle_IA8A4916.jpg
  • Martial Eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) Feeding on a helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris).  Martial eagles are the largest eagles in Africa. They soar over the plains and scrublands of sub-Saharan Africa, hunting everything from gamebirds, snakes and lizards, to jackal, domestic goats and mammals as large as small antelopes. Martial eagles reach around 80 centimetres in length and patrol a territory of about 130 square kilometres.
    BT_Martial-eagle_DSC05393.jpg
  • A Juvenile male green-crowned brilliant hummingbird (Heliodoxa jacula) on a branch as seen from behind in the Costa Rican rainforst
    BT_Hummingbird_juvenile_EYL09540.jpg
  • A male green-crowned brilliant hummingbird (Heliodoxa jacula) on a branch as seen from behind in the Costa Rican rainforst
    BT_Hummingbird_EYL09562.jpg
  • Close up of a green iguana (iguana Iguana) with spines and dewlap Photographed in Costa Rica
    BT_Green-Iguana_EYL07022.jpg
  • A herd of Dorcas Gazelle (Gazella dorcas), also known as the Ariel Gazelle Photographed in the Negev Desert, Israel
    BT_Gazella-dorcas_EYL05045.jpg
  • A herd of Dorcas Gazelle (Gazella dorcas), also known as the Ariel Gazelle Photographed near a water hole in the Negev Desert, Israel
    BT_Gazella-dorcas_EYL05029.jpg
  • A herd of Dorcas Gazelle (Gazella dorcas), also known as the Ariel Gazelle Photographed in the Negev Desert, Israel
    BT_Gazella-dorcas_EYL04963.jpg
  • A herd of Dorcas Gazelle (Gazella dorcas), also known as the Ariel Gazelle Photographed near a water hole in the Negev Desert, Israel
    BT_Gazella-dorcas_EYL04950.jpg
  • A herd of Dorcas Gazelle (Gazella dorcas), also known as the Ariel Gazelle Photographed near a water hole in the Negev Desert, Israel
    BT_Gazella-dorcas_EYL04928.jpg
  • Northern Fulmer (Fulmras glacialis) in flight near blue glacier, Svalbard, Spitsbergen, Norway
    BT_Fulmar_EYL02126.jpg
  • Spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus). Submerged in water. This reptile inhabits wetlands in Central and South America. It is exclusively carnivorous, feeding on fish, water birds and amphibians, and taking larger prey such as pigs when fully grown. An adult male can reach a length of around 2.5 metres, with females rarely exceeding 1.5 metres. Photographed in Costa Rica.
    BT_EYL07470.jpg
  • Collared aracari (Pteroglossus torquatus) on a branch. This toucan breeds from southern Mexico to Panama and across to Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and Costa Rica. Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Collared-aracari_EYL05435.jpg
  • Collared aracari (Pteroglossus torquatus) on a branch. This toucan breeds from southern Mexico to Panama and across to Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and Costa Rica. Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Collared-aracari_EYL05433.jpg
  • grey-headed chachalaca (Ortalis cinereiceps)  an arboreal species, found in rainforests. Photographed in the Costa Rican rainforest
    BT_Chachalaca_EYL06381.jpg
  • grey-headed chachalaca (Ortalis cinereiceps)  an arboreal species, found in rainforests. Photographed in the Costa Rican rainforest
    BT_Chachalaca_EYL05349.jpg
  • The Colombian white-faced capuchin (Cebus capucinus), also known as the Colombian white-headed capuchin or Colombian white-throated capuchin, is a medium-sized New World monkey of the family Cebidae, subfamily Cebinae. Photographed in Costa Rica
    BT_Capuchin_EYL06105.jpg
  • Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth (Bradypus variegatus), at the Manuel Antonio National Park, (Parque Nacional Manuel Antonio), Costa Rica
    BT_Brown-throated-sloth_EYL08235.jpg
  • Boat-billed heron (Cochlearius cochlearius) (also called boatbill) perching on a branch. This nocturnal bird lives in mangrove swamps in Mexico and Central and South America. Photographed in Costa Rica in June.
    BT_Boat-billed-Heron_EYL06499.jpg
  • blue ice of glacier Dahlbreen. The ice of blue icebergs contains fewer air bubbles than those appearing more or less white. On rainy days their colour appears particularly intense. This big iceberg is floating in Oscar II Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard., Norway.
    BT_Blue-Ice_EYL03365.jpg
  • blue ice of glacier Dahlbreen. The ice of blue icebergs contains fewer air bubbles than those appearing more or less white. On rainy days their colour appears particularly intense. This big iceberg is floating in Oscar II Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard., Norway.
    BT_Blue-Ice_EYL02174.jpg
  • blue ice of glacier Dahlbreen. The ice of blue icebergs contains fewer air bubbles than those appearing more or less white. On rainy days their colour appears particularly intense. This big iceberg is floating in Oscar II Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard., Norway.
    BT_Blue-Ice_DSC04653.jpg
  • Black vulture (Coragyps atratus). near a carcass on the ground. These birds of prey range from the southeastern USA to Central Chile and Uruguay in South America. Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Black-vulture_EYL00030.jpg
  • A cruise ship in the Arctic sea ice in Svalbard, Norway in July
    BT_Arctic-Ship_EYL02420.jpg
  • Anhinga (Anhinga anhinga) drying its feathers. This bird is around 85 centimetres long and has a wingspan of 117 centimetres. It's feathers are not waterproof and need to be dried regularly. It dives for fish and can remain underwater for long periods of time. Photographed in Costa Rica
    BT_Anhinga_EYL07161.jpg
  • American crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) on the river bank. Photographed in Costa Rica.
    BT_American-crocodile_EYL06418.jpg
  • Martial Eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) Feeding on a helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris).  Martial eagles are the largest eagles in Africa. They soar over the plains and scrublands of sub-Saharan Africa, hunting everything from gamebirds, snakes and lizards, to jackal, domestic goats and mammals as large as small antelopes. Martial eagles reach around 80 centimetres in length and patrol a territory of about 130 square kilometres.
    BT_Martial-eagle_IA8A4918.jpg
  • The lesser violetear (Colibri cyanotus), also known as the mountain violet-ear, is a medium-sized, metallic green hummingbird species commonly found in forested areas from Costa Rica to northern South America. Photographed in Costa Rica in June
    BT_Hummingbird_EYL09529.jpg
  • Growing algae on the eastern shores of Zanzibar
    BT_Zanzibar-Algae_11.jpg
  • Growing algae on the eastern shores of Zanzibar
    BT_Zanzibar-Algae_03.jpg
  • Warthog (Phacochoerus africanus) Photographed in Serengeti, Tanzania
    BT_Warthog_EYL03633.jpg
  • White-headed vulture (Trigonoceps occipitalis) Critically endangered bird species endemic to Africa. In flight with a blue sky background. Photographed at Lake Kariba National Park, Zimbabwe
    BT_vulture-Zimbabwe_34.jpg
  • Victoria Falls is a waterfall in southern Africa on the Zambezi River at the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
    BT_Victoria-falls_3.jpg
  • Victoria Falls, Named by David Livingstone in 1855 after Queen Victoria, The waterfall is formed by the Zambezi River falling into a 100 metre deep chasm running east to west across the flow of the river. The river is on the Zimbabwe-Zambia border.
    BT_Victoria-falls_255.jpg
  • Victoria Falls, Named by David Livingstone in 1855 after Queen Victoria, The waterfall is formed by the Zambezi River falling into a 100 metre deep chasm running east to west across the flow of the river. The river is on the Zimbabwe-Zambia border.
    BT_Victoria-falls_244.jpg
  • Victoria Falls is a waterfall in southern Africa on the Zambezi River at the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
    BT_Victoria-falls_2.jpg
  • The Victoria Falls Bridge marks the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe in Southern Africa
    BT_Victoria-Falls-Bridge.jpg
  • Yellow-billed stork (Mycteria ibis) nesting colony. This large wading bird is found in Africa south of the Sahara. It uses its long bill to catch fish and other prey in water. Photographed at Lake Manyara, Tanzania in April
    BT_Stork-Nesting_03.jpg
  • Lilac-breasted roller (Coracias caudatus) perching in a thorn bush. Photographed in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania
    BT_Roller_EYL03645.jpg
  • A family of wild ostriches (Struthio camelus). This group consists of females and a male. The ostrich, a flightless bird, is the world's largest and tallest bird, being around 2.5 metres tall. It inhabits plains and dry areas in central and southern Africa, feeding on seeds, flowers, leaves and plant stems. When threatened, it can reach a top speed of around 64 kilometres per hour. Photographed in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania.
    BT_Ostriches_EYL04350.jpg
  • Local fisherman and young boy with an octopus, East Coast, Zanzibar
    BT_Octopus_019.jpg
  • Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania. View of the crater
    BT_Ngorongoro_EYL04300.jpg
  • Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania. View of the crater
    BT_Ngorongoro_EYL04286.jpg
  • Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania. View of the crater
    BT_Ngorongoro_EYL04284.jpg
  • Acacia tree in a Masai Village. Maasai an ethnic group of semi-nomadic people. Photographed in Serengeti, Tanzania
    BT_Masai-Village_EYL03928.jpg
  • Traditional Masai Jumping Dance at a Masai Village, Tanzania, East Africa
    BT_Masai-Dance_EYL03912.jpg
  • Traditional Masai Jumping Dance at a Masai Village, Tanzania, East Africa
    BT_Masai-Dance_EYL03911.jpg
  • Local residents on the east coast of Zanzibar at low tide. Seaweed is scattered on the sand
    BT_Low-Tide_023.jpg
  • Welcome sign to Lake Manyara National Park. Home of the tree climbing lions, Lake Manyara, Arusha, Tanzania,
    BT_Lake-Manyara_EYL04678.jpg
  • General view of Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe. Largest man made lake
    BT_Lake-Kariba_46.jpg
  • Red African Sun setting over Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe
    BT_Lake-Kariba-Sunset_146.jpg
  • Sunset on Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe Dead tree stumps in the foreground
    BT_Lake-Kariba-Sunset_1234.jpg
  • Nyami Nyami's (Zambezi River God or Zambezi Snake spirit) statue near Lake Kariba dam, Zimbabwe
    BT_Lake-Kariba-Dam_42.jpg
  • Nyami Nyami's (Zambezi River God or Zambezi Snake spirit) statue near Lake Kariba dam, Zimbabwe
    BT_Lake-Kariba-Dam_43.jpg
  • View of the Kariba hydroelectric dam in the Kariba gorge of the Zambezi river between Zimbabwe and Zambia in southern Africa. The dam forms lake Kariba, the world's largest man-made lake
    BT_Lake-Kariba-dam_111.jpg
  • Kitesurfing in the Indian Ocean Photographed on the East Coast, Zanzibar
    BT_Kiteboarding_031.jpg
  • Lioness, Panthera leo, prowling. Photographed at Lake Kariba National Park, Zimbabwe
    BT_Kariba_lioness_99.jpg
  • Giant kingfisher (Megaceryle maxima) perched on a dry branch. This bird is the largest kingfisher in Africa and is found over most of the continent south of the Sahara Desert. Photographed in Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe
    BT_Kingfisher-Zimbabwe_29.jpg
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