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Mother and calf humpback whales swimming among the icebergs in Greenland. 🐋❄️
National Geographic
Rise and shine, it’s fishing time! 🎣🦦 These North American river otters use their long, sensitive whiskers to detect prey and can even close their nostrils while diving to keep water out.
National Geographic
The Happy Songs of Three Beautiful Girls at Elephant Nature Park
Their joyful melodies and radiant expressions reflect the true happiness of elephants living in freedom.
This is the sound of contentment, the harmony of a life filled with care, love, and peace.
Let their songs speak to your heart—the language of joy from three beautiful souls.💖
National Geographic
Common loon chick being fed
National Geographic
Banff National Park, Canada 🇨🇦
A glacier carved valley where Moraine Lake shimmers bright blue beneath the towering Ten Peaks. Fed by ancient ice and rich in rock flour, its color changes with the sun. Trails like Larch Valley wind through alpine forests, golden larches, and quiet meadows. A place of wild beauty and calm! ?🌲⛰
National Geographic
Bengal tigers are solitary animals, and they do not live in tight groups like other species do. Early on, tiger cubs form bonds with their mothers and rely heavily on them for food, protection, and teaching. This only lasts around 2 years however.
Once the cubs have grown to around 2-3 years old, they start to become independent. They'll eventually begin to leave their mother's territory, starting in small periods of time and finishing once they decide not to return. This is part of their development, as they need to establish their own spaces to survive.
Even stranger, some tigers may reunite with their mothers during mating season after they have sexually matured. Yet, despite once living and surviving together, both the children and the mother will not form any kind of bond and may not even tolerate each other's presence. 🐅🐯
National Geographic
Beautiful wild eagle owl
What a beautiful bird it is, with a very impressive look in its eyes. 🤎
National Geographic
Quiet, graceful… and a little bit of a thief 👀🦊
National Geographic
There’s a quiet, profound beauty in this scene of a gorgeous and brave Little Egret mommy meticulously tending to her incredibly five eggs 🪺🌷
National Geographic
She's just a baby, but this loggerhead sea turtle is already setting out on an epic journey 🐢
National Geographic
A young elephant bull visits a hyena den 🌿
National Geographic
Bobcats are a very rarely seen resident of Yellowstone National Park, as their fur coat provides them with great camouflage. These felines will spend most of their time travelling in search of prey, and their keen eyesight assists them in locating potential food.
Although they do tend to be active during the daytime, their shy nature and love for solitude often prevents humans from crossing paths with them.
National Geographic
Let’s enter the fairyland 😍
National Geographic
Don’t forget to eat your veggies!🌾🥬🥕
National Geographic
Basking shark in glass in California! 🦈🤯🔥
Basking shark are extremely rare to find in Southern California, but are possible during certain months! At first glance, the world's second largest fish might seem menacing: Its gaping mouth has six rows of teeth in its upper jaw, and nine rows below, for a total of about 1,500 tiny, hooked teeth. However, though they may be intimidating based on their size, basking sharks are filter feeders. They will not attack people, and it is exceedingly rare that anyone is injured by a basking shark.
National Geographic
A lioness resting in a sausage tree after a successful hunt. Her belly was so big it was hanging off on the side of the branch 😂 Sun was starting to set. Everything was just so beautiful on the Serengeti 🥺
National Geographic
Tucked along the rugged coastlines from Alaska to British Columbia lives a rare and elusive population of sea wolves.
These wolves are genetically distinct from their inland cousins. They’re smaller in size, powerful swimmers, and get more than 75% of their diet from the sea — feasting on everything from salmon and seals to shellfish, kelp, and even the odd whale carcass.
National Geographic
The American badger is a sturdy, nocturnal mammal recognized for its striking black-and-white facial markings and exceptional digging abilities. Native to the grasslands and open areas of North America, it hunts rodents by skillfully excavating their burrows. Fiercely solitary and territorial, the American badger plays a vital role in its ecosystem—both by keeping small mammal populations in check and by creating burrows that later become homes for other wildlife.
National Geographic
Three tiny foxes share their spoils in the middle of the road🦊
National Geographic
We've always wanted to see life through a beaver's eyes 🦫
National Geographic
Baby hippo and his mom❤️
National Geographic
Maybe they are probably completely happy doing their own thing?🧐💕
National Geographic
The Ibex is a species of wild goat that can be found across Europe, Asia, and Africa. They have strong hooves, with concave undersides, that allow them to grip onto the sides of steep, rocky slopes.
The reason they dangerously scale these vertical dam walls is due to the salt that forms onto the rocks at larger heights. This salt is essential for their survival, as they are vegetarians and become deficient as a result of this diet. 🐐
National Geographic
Ermine on the run!
Running through the rocks exploring every nook and cranny this little ermine is searching for a meal.
National Geographic
Corvids obsessed by coat hangers
National Geographic
For their first year, lynx kittens rely on one thing: their mother 🐾😻
National Geographic