Male Elephant under stormy skies on bank of Zambezi River. Zimbabwe.
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- África
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- animal
- AWL Images
- colmillo
- elefante
- elefante africano
- elefante macho
- fauna silvestre
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- imagen a color
- mamífero
- naturaleza
- nubarrón
- nube de tormenta
- Pachyderm
- río
- ríos
- río Zambeze
- sacar fotos
- safari
- safaris
- tempestad
- tormenta
- Zimbabue
Imágenes relacionadas
- Zimbabwe,Zambezi River. Male elephants (Loxodonta africana) under stormy clouds on the bank of the Zambezi River.
- Male Elephant (Loxodonta africana) under stormy clouds on bank of Zambezi River.
- Zambia,Lower Zambezi National park. Fly-fishing for tiger fish on the Zambezi River against a backdrop of elephants on neighboring island.
- Botswana,Okavango Delta,Moremi Game Reserve. Bull elephant (Loxodonta africana) drinking in the waters of the Khwai River.
- 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.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- 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.
- Zambia,Lower Zambezi National park. Herd of elephants crossing the Zambezi Riverin line.
- Elephants approach the Chobe River in the late afternoon.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.
- 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.
- 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 herd of elephants moves across the Amboseli plains.Elephants are gregarious,living in family groups consisting of related cows and their offspring. They are led by an old female,known as a matriarch. Sometimes,family groups met up to form large herds.