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LEOPARD A BROTHER. BRUTE STRENGTH TO LIFT UP STUFF. MOST HUMANS DON'T STAND A CHANCE AGAINST THESE GUYS.
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JAGUARSARE SO UNDERRATED ![]() THEY HANDLE DIFFICULT TASK EASILY. IMAGINE A CAIMAN!
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ITS TEARS UP COCONUT LIKE IT'S HOT. IMAGINE YOUR FINGERS ![]() THEY HUNT FOR BIRDS AND RIP THEM APART.
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1. COCONUT CRABThe largest of its kind
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HOW'S YOUR WEEK GOING?✌️✌️✌️ ALL IMAGES WERE SOURCED FROM PINTEREST. THEY ARE QUITE CUTE AND ADORABLE |
![]() Mama no go die!☹️☹️ |
An Oppo phone! Zero Filter
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![]() Marriage is underrated!♥️♥️ Get married to the bone of your bone and the flesh of your flesh and you'd be fine. |
This animal reminds me of the 2016 animation "ZOOTOPIA". This guy was a mafia boss in the movie, guarded by huge polar bears. |
RudyNerdy:Absolutely real |
25. Angel Fitor took this image in the waters off Alicante, Spain. Immersed in a strong current, an otherwise slightly undulating salp chain twists and turns forming whimsical shapes. Salps move by contracting, which pumps water through their gelatinous bodies
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24. Night hikes through the Ecuadorian jungle are one of photographer Lucas Bustamente’s favourite activities. With a keen interest in herpetology, he was overjoyed to spot this labiated rainfrog, a species that's abundant in the region. It had just caught a baby tarantula and he says that its comical expression said ‘caught in the act'
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23. Jake Davis from the US was on a boat off the coast of Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia, Canada, where he watched humpback whales bubble-net feeding. Here the leader whale dives to locate the fish. Once the fish are located, the rest of the pod swim in decreasing circles while blowing bubbles that create a net, trapping the fish
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22. Australian snapper Wayne Osbourn spotted this male humpback calf and its mother while diving off the Vava’u Island group in the Kingdom of Tonga. The calf kept a curious eye on Wayne as it twisted and turned before returning to its mother periodically to suckle. She was relaxed and motionless 20 metres (65 feet) below the surface
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21. A school of red tooth triggerfish forms a cloud of silhouettes above a river of convict blennies flowing over the coral in Verde Island Passage, Philippines. The Passage, a strait that separates the islands of Luzon and Mindoro, is one of the most productive marine ecosystems in the world. The stunning shot was captured by US photographer David Doubiltet
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20. Italian photographer Marco Valentini was in Hortobágyi National Park, Hungary, when he spotted these kestrels displaying typical courtship behaviour. Here the female has just recovered an offering of a young green lizard from her suitor and in this touching moment she tenderly took hold of his claw
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19. For over two years, German photographer Ingo Arndt has followed the pumas of Torres del Paine National Park in Patagonia, Chile. This female was so used to his presence that one day she fell asleep nearby. On awakening, she glanced at him in a familiar way, and he was able to capture this portrait of a completely relaxed puma
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18. Russian photographer Valeriy Mallev was on a summer expedition to the Mongolian part of the Gobi Desert when he happened upon a long-eared jerboa. As blood moves through the ears of these usually nocturnal animals, excess heat dissipates across the skin and the jerboa is able to stay cool
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17. While on a bear watching trip to the Nakina River in British Columbia, Canada, German photographer Marion Volborn spotted a grizzly bear and her young cub approach a tree. The mother bear started to rub against the tree trunk and her cub imitated her
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16. Hungarian photographer Csaba Tökölyi had been in a hide all night in his home country photographing nocturnal species and their activities, but as the golden light of dawn reflected on the surface of the water, an egret in wonderful breeding plumage stopped close by. He said that its elongated scapular feathers covered the bird as if it was wearing a gown
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15. Over several months, Salvador Colvée Nebot, from Spain, watched different species of bird use the dead flower spike of an agave in Valencia, Spain, as a perch before descending to a small pond to drink. A pair of common kestrels were frequent visitors though each time they came, magpies would hassle them
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14. Canadian photographer Martin Buzora captured this heartwarming shot. It shows Elias Mugambi, a ranger at Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in northern Kenya with orphaned black rhino Kitui. Elias often spends weeks away from his family caring for orphaned black rhinos. The young animals are in the sanctuary as a result of poaching or because their mothers are blind and cannot care for them safely in the wild
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13. After a rough journey by sea to the remote Snow Hill Island off the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, French photographer Yaz Loukhal flew by helicopter and then trekked through thick snow to reach this emperor penguin colony. His efforts were rewarded with this incredible view of the whole colony
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12. Russian photographer Valeriy Maleev encountered this Pallas’s cat while it was out hunting in the Mongolian grasslands. It was -42°C (-44°F) on that frosty day, but Valeriy says the fairy-tale scene cancelled out the cold. Pallas’s cats are no bigger than a domestic cat and they stalk small rodents, birds and occasionally insects
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11. Spanish photographer Francis De Andres shot this mesmerising image in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard and called it 'spot the reindeer'. Conditions for photography there are extreme but the wildlife has adapted to the environment and its freezing temperatures. Francis found this composition of white arctic reindeer, which were observing him, both curious and charming
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10. It took American photographer Steve Levi 10 days of looking to spot this mother polar bear and her two cubs in Wapusk National Park in Canada. The creatures had recently left their birthing den to begin the long journey to the sea ice so the mother could feed. Steve said that after a nap, the cubs were in a playful mood
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9. Michael Schober was in the Hohe Tauren National Park in Austria when he shot this image of a group of marmots at close range. He says that the animals have become accustomed to the presence of humans and it is beneficial to them as human company deters predators such as golden eagles
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8. Michel Zoghzoghi from Lebanon shot this stunning image of a mother jaguar and her cub in the Pantanal region in Brazil. He calls it 'matching outfits' and says he captured it while on a boat on the Três Irmãos River. The felines swam right in front of the vessel and he says he watched mesmerized as they left the water holding an anaconda with a very similar pattern to their own
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7. Swedish photographer Marcus Wesberg shot this heartbreaking image. It's called 'captive' and shows a giant panda sitting in a cage at a breeding centre in Shaanxi, China. He says that with a growing wild population and no realistic plan of how to breed and raise pandas for re-release into the wild rather than a life in captivity – not to mention lack of habitat being the largest barrier to the continued spread of the wild population – it is unclear how such centres will benefit the species
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6. In Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve, photographer Clement Mwangi spent time observing this beautiful leopard as she soaked up the last warm rays of the setting sun. Clement says he is mindful to remember to take pleasure in life’s simple moments – being all too aware that sometimes, as a wildlife photographer, you can miss the exceptional while looking for the unusual
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5. This image, called 'losing the fight', was captured by British photographer Aaron Gekoski. It shows an orangutan that has been used in a degrading performance in Bangkok. The shows were temporarily stopped in 2004 due to international pressure, but today the shows continue – twice a day, every day – with hundreds of people paying to watch the orangutans box, dance, play the drums and more
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