A juvenile wandering Albatross on Prion Island. The parents feed the single chick for up to ten months. They will breed every two years.
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Risoluzione Web
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19.4×15.2cm 28ppcm
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40.9×32.0cm 28ppcm
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20.4×16.0cm 118ppcm
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Immagini correlate
- A Wandering Albatross in flight off Shag Rocks. These albatrosses have the largest wingspan of any living bird in the world, averaging between 8 feet and 11.5 feet
- A large colony of King penguins with unfledged chicks in down feathers at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- King penguins and an unfledged chick in down feathers at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.
- Wandering albatross (Diomedia exulans) on nest.
- Wandering albatross (Diomedia exulans) gently preening a photographer
- A King Penguin unfledged chick begs food from its mother. The chicks will lose their fluffy brown down a year after being born at which time they will begin to fend for themselves.
- King Penguin unfledged chicks at Gold Harbour, which is home to around 25,000 breeding pairs of these most attractive penguins. The chicks will lose their fluffy brown down about a year after being born.
- Gold Harbour is a magnificent amphitheatre of glaciers and mountains with around 25,000 breeding pairs of King Penguins. The unfledged chicks have brown down which will change to adult plumage within a year of being born.
Più immagini correlate
- Two King penguins calling at Grytviken, which was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- A Macaroni Penguin at Stromness. The old whaling station at Stromness became famous when Ernest Shakleton ended his epic crossing of South Georgia there in 1916.
- A visitor photographing King Penguins at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- A magnificent wildlife spectacle at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- King penguins waddle along the shoreline at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- King penguins emerge from the sea at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- A King penguin passes close to a fur seal at Salisbury Plain. The vast plain is home to South Georgia s second largest King Penguin rookery.
- King penguins walk in line straight past a fur seal at Right Whale Bay near the northeast tip of South Georgia.