Elephants drink and bathe in the Mara River,Kenya
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Resolución de Internet
550×375px
19.4×13.3cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
1026×700px
36.3×24.7cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
2270×1548px
19.2×13.1cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
5172×3527px
43.8×29.9cm 118ppcm
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- África
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- agua
- animal
- animal africano
- AWL Images
- colmillo
- coto de caza
- elefante
- elefante africano
- fauna silvestre
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- imagen a color
- keniano
- Kenya
- Mara River
- Masai Mara
- orilla
- orillas
- Pachyderm
- parque nacional
- ribera (río)
- sacar fotos
- sediento
Imágenes relacionadas
- An elephant raises its trunk to sniff the air,Masai Mara Game Reserve,Kenya
- A herd of elephants drinking at a waterhole in Tsavo West National Park,Kenya
- 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.
- Hippos basking on the banks of the Mara River.
- A leopard guards its kill of an impala antelope in a tree to avoid hyenas,Masai Mara Game Reserve,Kenya
- A leopard has taken its kill of an impala antelope up a tall tree to avoid hyenas,Masai Mara Game Reserve,Kenya
- A fine old bull elephant in Tsavo West National Park,Kenya
- A mother and baby elephant in Tsavo West National Park,Kenya
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Young elephants running towards a waterhole in Tsavo West National Park,Tsavo
- A rear view of a fine bull elephant in Meru National Park,Meru,Kenya
- A fine bull elephant in Meru National Park,Meru,Kenya
- Elephants in Masai Mara Game Reserve,Kenya
- 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.