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CONSERVATION

49 images Created 28 Jun 2017

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  • KWS veterinary -  supported by The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust -  Jeremiah Poghon, his team and KWS Honorary Warden Davide Gremmo treating a wounded lioness. Probably the lioness has been hurt by a buffalo, but since the number of lions is rapidly declining, they are also treated for wounds not due to poaching.
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  • Conservationist Tanya Leibrick with an Aldabra tortoise (Dipsochelys dussumieri), Fregate Island, Seychelles
    SEY1211240586.jpg
  • A lioness, Panthera leo, with a tracking device on its neck, Chobe National Park, Botswana.
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  • Masai with a tusk removed by Park Rangers from an African elephant dead by natural causes. The ranger must to this job quickly before the arrival of the poachers.  Masai Mara, Kenya.
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  • Lioness wearing tracking collar. Living with Lions GPS monitoring Program, Loisaba Wilderness Conservancy, Laikipia, Kenya.
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  • Living with Lions GPS monitoring Program, Loisaba Wilderness Conservancy, Laikipia, Kenya.
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  • Samburu guide searching for Lions with electronic tracking system. Living with Lions GPS monitoring Program, Loisaba Wilderness Conservancy, Laikipia, Kenya.
    KY09121293.jpg
  • Dane Marx and Tanya Leibrick with an Aldabra tortoise (Dipsochelys dussumieri), Fregate Island, Seychelles
    SEY1211240592.jpg
  • A white rhinoceros, Ceratotherium simum. In Masai Mara Rhino santuary they live 24 hours a day escorted by anti poaching units.
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  • A white rhinoceros, Ceratotherium simum. In Masai Mara Rhino santuary they live 24 hours a day escorted by anti poaching units.
    KY1507220484.jpg
  • White rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum),  Masai Mara, Kenya.
    KY1507220502.jpg
  • Living with Lions GPS monitoring Program, Loisaba Wilderness Conservancy, Laikipia, Kenya.
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  • A newborn elephant dead for natural causes or killed by predators. A female elephant has been found killed by poachers not far away. Kunene, Namibia.
    NAM1107170837.jpg
  • A tusk removed by Park Rangers from an African elephant dead by natural causes. The ranger must do this job quickly before the arrival of the poachers.  Masai Mara, Kenya.
    KY09101032.jpg
  • Abu Camp, a luxury camp in Botswana where tourist may experience the elephant back safari, has been originally founded by Randall Moore as a refuge for elephants that survived a cull, orphans as a result of the mother being killed, or rescued from a zoo or a circus. Many elephants are released into the wild. Okavango Delta, Botswana.
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  • A newly arrived long-eared owl chick receiving a general health check, Amus Wildlife Recovery Center, Extremadura, Spain.
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  • David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust is the most successful orphan-elephant rescue and rehabilitation center.  Visit of schoolchildren is part of the Community Outreach Program to raise awareness. Nairobi, Kenya.
    SP-KY-022630.jpg
  • Amus Wildlife Recovery Center staff examining a newly arrived white stork, Extremadura, Spain.
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  • A newly arrived long-eared owl chick receiving a general health check, Amus Wildlife Recovery Center, Extremadura, Spain.
    ES1806270060.jpg
  • Four European bisons, Bison bonasus, after the release in the wild. Life Re-Bison is a project organized by the Rewilding Europe foundation and supported by several European zoos and with the financial help of the European Commission.
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  • Cheking the X-ray of a black kite receiving a fisiotherapy, Amus Wildlife Recovery Center, Extremadura, Spain.
    ES1806270115.jpg
  • A European bison, Bison bonasus, is released in the wild by Cesare Avesani Zaborra, president of ARCA Foundation, and Frans Shepers, Managing Director of Rewildling Europe. organizer of the project Life Re-Bison, supported by the Europena Commission.
    ARCA1805160139.jpg
  • A European bison, Bison bonasus, is released in the wild by the team of ARCA Foundation, as part of the project Life Re-Bison organized by the Rewilding Europe foundation.
    ARCA1805160111.jpg
  • A European bison, Bison bonasus,  in a cage anesthetized by the Arca Foundation team. The bison will be transported to Romania for release in the wild, as part of the project Life Re-Bison organized by the Rewilding Europe foundation.
    ARCA1805140044.jpg
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