King penguins and an unfledged chick in down feathers at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
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Resolución de Internet
550×444px
19.4×15.7cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
1145×926px
40.5×32.7cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
2385×1929px
20.2×16.3cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
4770×3858px
40.4×32.7cm 118ppcm
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Imágenes relacionadas
- A large colony of King penguins with unfledged chicks in down feathers at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- King penguins walk in line straight past a fur seal at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- A visitor photographing King penguins at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- A King penguin colony at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- King penguins at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- A fur seal in tussock grass at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia. The concentrations of fur seals on South Georgia are the densest of any marine mammal in the world. King penguins are in the background.
- A King Penguin unfledged chick begs food from its mother. The chicks will lose their fluffy brown down a year after being born at which time they will begin to fend for themselves.
- King Penguin unfledged chicks at Gold Harbour, which is home to around 25,000 breeding pairs of these most attractive penguins. The chicks will lose their fluffy brown down about a year after being born.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Gold Harbour is a magnificent amphitheatre of glaciers and mountains with around 25,000 breeding pairs of King Penguins. The unfledged chicks have brown down which will change to adult plumage within a year of being born.
- Two King penguins calling at Grytviken, which was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- A visitor photographing King Penguins at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- A magnificent wildlife spectacle at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- King penguins waddle along the shoreline at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- King penguins emerge from the sea at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- A King penguin passes close to a fur seal at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- A King Penguin comes ashore at Gold Harbour. They spend up to 75% of their time at sea and will dive more than 150 feet in search of food, especially krill.