Tanzania,Katavi National Park. An elephant displays aggression.
Introductory Offer
Save 50% when you join our email list
-
Web Resolution
366×550px
5.1×7.6in 72ppi
-
Low Resolution
691×1037px
9.6×14.4in 72ppi
-
Medium Resolution
1531×2296px
5.1×7.7in 300ppi
-
High Resolution
3500×5250px
11.7×17.5in 300ppi
* Final price based on usage, not file size.
Related Keywords
- 862-
- Africa
- African
- African (places and things)
- aggressive
- angry
- AWL Images
- color image
- color photography
- color picture
- demonstration
- ear (sensory organ)
- elephant
- image
- irate
- Katavi
- national park
- Natural History
- Pachyderm
- photograph
- photography
- picture
- Southern Tanzania
- stock photograph
- stock picture
- tusk
- tusker
- United Republic of Tanzania
Related Images
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. An elephant displays aggression on the banks of the Katuma River.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. An elephant caked in mud from the Katuma River.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. A hippo prepares to charge out of its mud wallow in the Katuma River.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. Elephants drink and cool off in the Katuma River.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. A herd of elephants drinks in the Katuma River.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. A hippo basks in a mud wallow as the Katuma River dries at the end of the long dry season in the Katavi National Park.
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. Hippos wallow in mud as the Katuma River dries at the end of the long dry season in the Katavi National Park.
- Kenya, Masai Mara, Narok County. Bull elephant feeding on lush green grass.
More Related Images
- Tanzania,Katavi National Park. Mating lions.
- A fine bull elephant feeds along the rim of the world famous Ngorongoro Crater.The craters 102 square mile floor and the surrounding highlands are spectacular for wildlife.
- 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 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 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.
- 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.