Kenya,Masai Mara. Mara River
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Resolución de Internet
550×352px
19.4×12.4cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
1057×678px
37.4×24.0cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
2340×1502px
19.8×12.7cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
5643×3623px
47.8×30.7cm 118ppcm
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- África
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- aire libre
- al aire libre
- animal
- AWL Images
- bañarse
- baño
- caminar por el agua
- fauna silvestre
- flora y fauna marina
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- hipopótamo
- imagen a color
- Kenya
- mamífero
- Mara River
- Masai Mara
- nadar
- natación
- naturaleza
- Pachyderm
- parque nacional
- relajar
- río
- ríos
- sacar fotos
Imágenes relacionadas
- In the late afternoon,hippos bask in the Mara River. These vast animals have a very hierarchical society. They graze by night,eating as much as 60kg of grass in about five hours. No domestic animal can compete with them for the economy with which they convert vegetation into animal protein.
- Hippos in the Mara River.
- Kenya, Masai Mara. A mother hippo and her calf cool off in the Mara River.
- Kenya, Masai Mara, Narok County. A group of hippos wallow in the Mara River.
- Hippos wallow in a small freshwater lake on the floor of the world famous Ngorongoro Crater.The craters 102 square mile floor is spectacular for wildlife.
- A large herd of elephants drink at the Chobe River.Elephants can go several days without water but drink and bathe daily by choice.In the dry season when all the seasonal waterholes and pans have dried, thousands of wild animals converge on the Chobe River, the boundary between Botswana and Namibia.
- Kenya, Narok County, Masai Mara National Reserve. Zebras swim across the Mara River watched by a large hippo.
- Elephants drink at the Chobe River. Elephants can go several days without water but drink and bathe daily by choice.In the dry season when all the seasonal waterholes and pans have dried,thousands of wild animals converge on the Chobe River,the boundary between Botswana and Namibia. The park is justifiably famous for its large herds of elephants and buffaloes.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Pod of hippos dozing in the Mara River, Kenya.
- Burchell's Zebras and white-bearded gnus,or wildebeest,cross the Mara River during the latter's annual migration from the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania to Masai Mara Game Reserve.
- Wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) crossing mara river on migration
- Zebra (Equus burchelli) and Wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) crossing mara river on migration
- Wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) Crossing Mara River
- Elephants swim across the Chobe River.In the dry season when all the seasonal waterholes and pans have dried,thousands of wild animals converge on the Chobe River,the boundary between Botswana and Namibia. The park is justifiably famous for its large herds of elephants and buffaloes..
- Elephants drink at the Chobe River. Elephants can go several days without water but drink and bathe daily by choice.In the dry season when all the seasonal waterholes and pans have dried,thousands of wild animals converge on the Chobe River,the boundary between Botswana and Namibia. The park is justifiably famous for its large herds of elephants and buffaloes..
- Elephants enjoy a mud bath near the Chobe River waterfront.In the dry season when all the seasonal waterholes and pans have dried,thousands of wild animals converge on the Chobe River,the boundary between Botswana and Namibia. The park is justifiably famous for its large herds of elephants and buffaloes..