Wayne Levin proves that underwater photography doesn’t have to be colorful to be spectacular.
(via nirdian)
Source: waynelevinimages.com
Wayne Levin proves that underwater photography doesn’t have to be colorful to be spectacular.
(via nirdian)
Source: waynelevinimages.com
So I didn’t know that freaking dragons existed. Just look at them. Just look. They hide under a disguise of feathers and call themselves bearded vultures. But I see through their lies.
Just a reminder:the natural diet of these birds is BONES. Not just bone marrow; actual bone shards. They pick up huge freaking bones from carcasses and drop them onto rocks until they get spiky pieces and then they swallow them. Their stomach acid dissolves bone. Also fact: when sufficiently threatened, they’ve been observed to deliberately puke on the threat.
(via 33588495215)
Heinrich van den Berg (South Africa)
Leaping lemur
Verreaux’s sifakas are found only in southern and southwestern Madagascar. They are not as endangered as many of the island’s lemurs, but their numbers are falling, mainly because of deforestation. They are most often photographed crossing open areas of ground, jumping upright, as if on springs. But when Heinrich found a group feeding in trees in the Nahampoana Reserve, what impressed him was the extraordinary way they use the technique to leap from one tree to another. ‘They spring off their back legs, then twist in the air to land perfectly on the next trunk,’ says Heinrich. The photographic conditions were ideal – the sifakas in shadow and a bright background behind – enabling him to use a slow shutter speed for the background effect of movement and a flash to freeze the leap.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + 16-35mm lens; 1/12 sec at f9; ISO 100; two Quantum flashes.
(via theoneaboutnature)
Source: nhm.ac.uk
Source: Flickr / reemul
Source: Flickr / stefankoeder
#madagascar #ranomafana #river #rainforest #trees #lemur (Taken with Instagram at Ranomafana, Madagascar)
A curious young polar bear comes in for a closer look at the camera held by veteran nature photographer Steven Kazlowski in Bernard Spit, Alaska
Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat
Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!


by Andrey

Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat
Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!


by Andrey
