A male warthog in Lake Nakuru National Park.
Introductory Offer
Save 50% when you join our email list
-
Web Resolution
550×477px
7.6×6.6in 72ppi
-
Low Resolution
909×790px
12.6×11.0in 72ppi
-
Medium Resolution
2011×1747px
6.7×5.8in 300ppi
-
High Resolution
5676×4932px
18.9×16.4in 300ppi
* Final price based on usage, not file size.
Related Keywords
- 862-
- Africa
- African
- African (places and things)
- African animal
- African Wildlife
- aggressive
- animal
- AWL Images
- color image
- color photography
- color picture
- Common Warthog
- defiant
- desert warthog
- game reserve
- grumpy
- hog
- image
- Kenya
- Lake Nakuru National Park
- male
- male animal
- mammal
- Nakuru
- national park
- Natural History
- nature
- nature reserve
- Phacochoerus aethiopicus
- photograph
- photography
- picture
- pig
- safari
- Safaring
- stock photograph
- stock picture
- tusk
- warthog
- wild boar
- wildlife park
- wildlife reserve
Related Images
- A male warthog in Masai Mara Game Reserve.
- A reticulated giraffe (Giraffa reticulata) crosses a seasonal river bed in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya as a warthog stands in the shade of a thorn tree.These finely marked giraffes are only found in Northern Kenya and Somalia where they are now extremely vulnerable. .
- A bull elephant in Amboseli National Park. Elephants consume the equivalent of about 5% of their body weight (i.e. up to 300kg) in twenty-four hours.
- An elephant takes a mud bath in the Amboseli National Park. By taking regular mud or dust baths to keep away flies and other biting insects,elephants take on the soil colour of their own habitats.
- A bull elephant digs mineral-rich soil with its tusks at a saltlick in the Aberdare Forest.
- A bull elephant caked in mud emerges from a swamp at Amboseli National Park. Elephants consume the equivalent of about 5% of their body weight (i.e. up to 300kg) in twenty-four hours.
- A bull elephant in the Samburu National Game Reserve. Elephants are the colour of the soil where they live by taking regular dust baths to keep away flies and other biting insects.
- A bull elephant feeds in the Amboseli swamp. Little egrets are often seen close to elephants,feeding on the insects they disturb.Elephants consume about 5% of their body weight (i.e. up to 300kg) in twenty-four hours.
More Related Images
- A giant hog, or forest hog, in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Only discovered for science a hundred years ago, these heavily built, long haired hogs frequent upland forested areas and are rarely seen.Mature males weigh 100lb more than females.
- A dikdik in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya.Didiks are territorial and live in monogamous pairs. Only males have small horns.Well adapted to semi arid lands, they are completely independent of water, obtaining all the moisture they need from their food.
- A male gerenuk feeding in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya.Strictly browsers, gerenuk can often been seen feeding on branches six feet high by standing on their wedge shaped hooves, supported by their strong hind legs.Well adapted to semi arid lands, they can withstand waterless conditions with ease.
- Two white rhinos graze in the Lake Nakuru National Park under a threatening sky. A red-billed oxpecker clings to the neck of one of the rhinos.White rhinos are almost double the weight of black rhinos and are more docile. They are grazers rather than browsers so they do not compete for food with black rhinos.
- An elephant matriarch keeps a careful watch over her baby in the Samburu National Game Reserve. The gestation period of elephants is twenty-two months with an interval between calves of four to nine years.
- A large herd of Masai giraffes in the Masai Mara Game Reserve.
- Masai giraffes in the Masai Mara Game Reserve.
- A herd of elephants drinks from the Uaso Nyiro River in the Samburu National Game Reserve. By taking regular mud or dust baths to keep away flies and other biting insects,elephants take on the soil colour of their own habitats.