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Bisons
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Domesticated Reindeer - DarkTara
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Guépard - Cheetah
photographie : Winfried Wisniewski
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White-Tailed eagles
Photographie : Sylwia Domaradzka/Barcroft Media
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Red-eyed tree frog clings to a hercules beetle.
photographie : Nicolas Reusens
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Cysteodemus wislizeni
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Paons
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Panthère des neiges
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Bug shoot
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In mid-air
red squirrel in Kielder Forest, Northumberland
Photographie : Owen Humphreys/PA
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Sparing a thought for maleo birds on World Egg Day
by Simon Bradley / Save Our Species IUCN
Friday, October 11th is World Egg Day, when agribusiness promotes the consumption of eggs as a healthy source of protein. When it comes to one of Indonesia’s national icons however, the Endangered maleo bird (Macrocephalon maleo), conservationists such as the Alliance for Tompotika Conservation (AlTo) an SOS – Save Our Species grantee, are trying to discourage the practice of eating its giant eggs for special occasions.
his distinctive megapode – about the size of a chicken – is endemic to Sulawesi and Buton Islands, where it once blackened the beaches during egg-laying season, when the usually solitary animals would march out of the jungle to mate and bury eggs deep in the sands. Nowadays, the unusual life-cycle of the maleo is an increasingly rare sight. Using its big claws to hatch and tunnel to the surface, the lone chick can walk, feed itself and fly within a matter of hours, being independent of its parents and leaving evolutionary biologists to ponder how individuals recognize each other later in life.  A remarkable bird indeed, the maleo is also strikingly beautiful and has been legally protected in Indonesia since 1972. Yet old habits die hard and maleo eggs – like most megapode eggs – are very high in protein, making a tasty dish for those who can find them…
(read more: Monga Bay)
photos by Kevin Schafer and Marcy Summers
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Buffles musqués
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Seed from a thistle of the Centaurea genus.
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Moby Dick
Nord Queensland, Australie
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Gnous
Great Show of Nature by Alexander Goldenshtein Photographer
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King of the meadows
Photographie : George Logan
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Long-horned Orb-weaver Spider (Macracantha arcuata)
by itchydogimages on Flickr.
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