Leaderboard
728x15

Unicorn Deer Butt

A few nice plush stuffed animals images I found:


Unicorn Deer Butt
plush stuffed animals
Image by Katy Kristin
I love the real life Unicorn Deer in Itay. So I made an extra colorful plushie version!

His body's sewn from cotton corduroy, his horn is silk, his tail and ear interiors are cotton calico. He has needlefelted fawn spots and cheeks, his eyes are sewn on wool felt, and his nose and mouth are embroidered.

He's about a foot tall.

video 29 animales cráter Ngorongoro Tanzania

Some cool animal videos images:


video 29 animales cráter Ngorongoro Tanzania
animal videos
Image by Rafael Gomez - http://micamara.es


video 25 animales cráter Ngorongoro Tanzania
animal videos
Image by Rafael Gomez - http://micamara.es


video 24 animales cráter Ngorongoro Tanzania
animal videos
Image by Rafael Gomez - http://micamara.es

Nice Plush Animals photos

A few nice plush animals images I found:


Plush-Crested Jay
plush animals
Image by Lord TriLink


Stuffed Animals
plush animals
Image by watsonsinelgin

Nice Animal Welfare photos

A few nice animal welfare images I found:


Catwalk 2010, a Benefit Hair and Fashion Show
animal welfare
Image by Taekwonweirdo
Circuit Night Club



Catwalk 2010, a Benefit Hair and Fashion Show
animal welfare
Image by Taekwonweirdo
Circuit Night Club

Nice Animals Endangered photos

Check out these animals endangered images:



Monk seal
animals endangered
Image by Noah Sussman

Cool Extinct Animal images

Some cool extinct animal images:




Angalifu the Northern White Rhinoceros male (Ceratotherium simum cottoni)
extinct animal
Image by warriorwoman531
The northern white rhinoceros, or northern square-lipped rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum cottoni), is one of the two subspecies of the white rhinoceros. These animals are extinct in the wild and there are currently seven left in captivity - two at the San Diego Safari Park.

This is Angalifu, a male at the San Diego Safari Park in Escondido, CA. Angalifu is one of three male Northern White Rhino's in the world. Unfortunately this species of rhino will be extinct in our lifetime.

Photographed at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park in Escondido, CA

Cool Animal Abuse images

Some cool animal abuse images:


Aguia sapeira
animal abuse
Image by Muchaxo
Aguia sapeira


(CC) attribution, non-derivs, non-comercial ..
Please use only according to license terms, otherwise I'll have to take action and report abuse to Creative Commons, blog or notify any involved companies.


en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsh_Harrier
IMG_1492_gfk


Wolfspider
animal abuse
Image by Muchaxo
hogna radiata. 3661

How many eyes can you count?



(CC) attribution, non-derivs, non-comercial ..
Please use only according to license terms, otherwise I'll have to take action and report abuse to Creative Commons, blog or notify any envolved companies.




Nice Toy Animals photos

Check out these toy animals images:


SD 2008 trip - Animals Prairie Dogs - 009
toy animals
Image by insipidlife
Prairie Dogs are cute little guys with a sqeaky toy sound to them. They were plentiful in the badlands but they could have the plague so do not make contact if you go.


!
toy animals
Image by uncoolbob
Thanks to the threaded lens and through-the-lens focusing, this monster of a camera is quite versatile - it works quite nicely with a +1 close-up lens here, for example. The flash coverage/quality is also very good.

Nice Stuffed Animals photos

Check out these stuffed animals images:



Pikesville Branch - Stuffed Animal Story Time Sleepover
stuffed animals
Image by BCPL Photo
BCPL: Pikesville Branch - Stuffed Animal Story Time Sleepover - April 22, 2013

Nice Wildlife Animals photos

Some cool wildlife animals images:


13 points
wildlife animals
Image by wgdavis
One touch of nature makes the whole world kin

- From "Troilus and Cressida" by William Shakespeare

Cervus elaphus is known as 'Elk' in North America, 'Wapiti' by the Shawnee, and 'Red Deer' by Europeans.


Roe Deer at Oostvaardersplassen - The Netherlands.
wildlife animals
Image by dirkjankraan.com


Same bird from another angle
wildlife animals
Image by Saparevo

Cool Animal World images

Check out these animal world images:


Gorilla
animal world
Image by Buckeye Beth
Western lowland gorilla. Animal Kingdom, Disney World, Orlando, Florida, October 2007.


Animal Kingdom : Walt Disney World : Baloo
animal world
Image by Zengrrl
Waiting for another kid to hug

Cool Animal Puppy images

A few nice animal puppy images I found:


Foster puppies Sammi (the brown one) and Snickers (the brindle one)
animal puppy
Image by jennandjon


Foster puppies Sammi (the brown one) and Snickers (the brindle one)
animal puppy
Image by jennandjon

Nice Service Animal photos

Check out these service animal images:


Marcy
service animal
Image by stephskardal
Marcy is available for adoption. Call Salt Lake County Animal Services (801) 559-1100 and ask for animal ID #A337755.


Angus
service animal
Image by stephskardal
Angus is available for adoption. Call Salt Lake County Animal Services (801) 559-1100 and ask for animal ID #A338682.

RIP Shamrock, a stray bully dog that did not survive...

Some cool names for animals images:


RIP Shamrock, a stray bully dog that did not survive...
names for animals
Image by Beverly & Pack
My Name Was Shamrock

My name was Shamrock.
You never knew me but I existed.
I may have been a family pet at one time.
Discarded like last years Christmas present after the new wore off.
I may have been someones symbol of macho manhood.
Fighting in a bloody pit hidden in a garage.
I may have been the dog digging through your trash,
that you cursed and threw rocks at.
How many of you looked at me
and turned your head away
not wanting to see the ugliness of my abuse and neglect.
Had you looked at me , into my eyes,
Oh what you may have seen and learned.
I had love and companionship to give, kisses to share,

feelings .....
and many many wags of the tail that I rarely got to use.
I became resigned to the fact that the life I was living
was just the cards I been dealt.
Thin, dirty, sick, and not by any fault of mine,
a breed people happen to fear and loath.
One day , as I lie alone and close to death I saw a glimps of life,
the way it should have been for me.
A gentle hand with the touch of an angel stroked my filthy fur.

I heard a gentle voice tell me that I was worthy of love,
and there was a better life to be had.
I was taken to a place where people were not afraid of me.
I was given the name Shamrock , for luck.
Oh how I wish these people could have found me sooner.
I wanted so much to experience this life.
I tried so hard to regain the vigor and hope I once had.
I tried , but it was just to late.
I know you did all you could for me.
The last days of my life made up for the horror I had
experienced.
I wanted you to know...
my crossing was peaceful. Thanks to you.
I left feeling loved , warm and safe
Not to bad for a mangy, skinny dog with no name.
My name was Shamrock.

-auther unknown, shared by photographer Rebecca Snook Young


Note: Shamrock: a stray picked up by the shelter, severely emaciated and anemic. Donations were made but we were too late.....Shamrock had to be euthanized.


animalshorse
names for animals
Image by galina75
This photo was also taken at Bowen Park. I really love horses, and these little guys-miniatures-seemed so peaceful and sweet.

If you want to use this image please provide my name and a link to my site, New View (http://www.nuvunow.ca) underneath, because it will help bring people to my website, which strives to create health and happiness for people and animals.


Cheery pilot and observer with their mascot pup ready for a flight over the German lines
names for animals
Image by National Library of Scotland
Pilot and observer inside the cockpit of a two-man biplane, in France, during World War I. Holding up the regimental mascot of a pet dog and with big smiles on their faces, a pilot and an observer are pictured before setting out on a journey over enemy lines. Note the old-fashioned flying helmets and goggles that both men are wearing. The machine-gun fixed beside the rear cockpit has a swivel attachment on it, so that it can provide the plane with all-round firepower.

During 'the war to end all wars', an aerial battle between two or more aeroplanes was called a 'dogfight '. At the start of the conflict, fighter planes had two seats, with the pilot sitting in the front cockpit and a gunner-cum-observer occupying the rear cockpit. As the war continued, however, single-pilot aircraft became more prevalent, since these planes were clearly more effective during a 'dogfight'. During a 'dogfight ', pilots used cloud cover as an aerial form of camouflage, and often swooped down on their prey from out of the sun.

[Original reads: 'OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THE BRITISH WESTERN FRONT IN FRANCE. A cheery pilot and observer with their mascot pup ready for a flight over the German lines.']

digital.nls.uk/74549010

Nice All About Animals photos

Check out these all about animals images:



Shaggy Moth
all about animals
Image by Kiesha Jean
he didn't get the memo about the 70's being over

♥ My pictures come from my life so they all have great meaning to me. ::: CLICK HERE ::: to learn more about my life adventure.

♥ Shop 7ft photo wall prints by Kiesha Jean on Etsy

seminolecanyon069

Check out these extinct animals images:


seminolecanyon069
extinct animals
Image by mlhradio
Seminole Canyon State Park, Val Verde County, Texas. One of the more remote state parks, tucked into the southwest corner of Texas about an hour's drive west of Del Rio.

This area has been inhabited since the very earliest days that humans set foot in North America, going back nearly 12,000 years - back during the last Ice Age when the land was more verdant with now-extinct animals still roaming the surrounding prairies and forest. But over the millenia, the climate changed to its current, arid desert landscape - and the Indians adapted.

All through these years, the local Indians drew pictograms all over the surrounding canyon walls and caves. In the dry climate, protected by overhanging rock walls, many of these pictograms survived through the ages. Some of the more famous sites, such as the Fate Bell and Panther Cave, are the feature attractions of Seminole Canyon, and can be visited by guided tour through the park.

However, I have not yet visited these sites - instead focusing on other areas of the park. On the first visit (March 9th, 2008), I arrived after the park had closed for the day. I walked along the short 'Windmill Trail', a small loop near the visitor's center. This trail leads down to a small year-round spring and the ruins of a water catchment system that was used by local settlers over the past hundred years.

The return trip (September 27, 2008) was much more fruitful - I chose to hike the Rio Grande River Trail, a six-mile out-and-back loop that leads to the far corner of the park, almost a stone's throw from Old Mexico. With recent rains it was fairly lively and green, with countless butterflies passing through on their annual migration. The trail starts alongside the original 'Loop Trail', the 1882 railroad alignment that was abandoned a decade later when a less strenuous route was forged and the Pecos River High Bridge was built.

The trail itself is pretty boring - a flat, featureless hike across a nondescript desert plain. But the main highlight of the hike quickly comes into view. There is a mile-long spur shooting off to the left called the Pressa Trail, which leads to an overlook looking down at a three-way intersection in the Seminole Canyon below. Here, the waters from Lake Amistad many miles away along the Rio Grande peter out; to the right, the waters are wide and deep, muddied from the recent rainstorms. To the left, the two forks of Seminole Canyon are mostly dry. From the top of the overlook, sheer cliffs lead staight down over a hundred feet to the waters below. The view is, well, *breathtaking* - and worth the trip.

Back on the main trail, a few miles later it comes to an abrupt end at the junction where Seminole Canyon merges with the Rio Grande. The location overlooks the Panther Cave pictograms, on the opposite shore far below, accessible only by boat. To the right, a few hundred yards away, are the hills of Mexico. Here, the water is deeper, the canyons steeper, the chasm wider. An impressive view, although not as amazing as the Pressa Trail overlook.

From here, it is a straight hike back along the south portion of the loop, my only companion a great horned toad trying to hide in the gravel of the trail. I would like to return to this park to take the guided tours, and there are other tours available nearby on private land to other pictogram sites as well. And I am told this park is also fabulous for bird watchers as well.



seminolecanyon052
extinct animals
Image by mlhradio
Seminole Canyon State Park, Val Verde County, Texas. One of the more remote state parks, tucked into the southwest corner of Texas about an hour's drive west of Del Rio.

This area has been inhabited since the very earliest days that humans set foot in North America, going back nearly 12,000 years - back during the last Ice Age when the land was more verdant with now-extinct animals still roaming the surrounding prairies and forest. But over the millenia, the climate changed to its current, arid desert landscape - and the Indians adapted.

All through these years, the local Indians drew pictograms all over the surrounding canyon walls and caves. In the dry climate, protected by overhanging rock walls, many of these pictograms survived through the ages. Some of the more famous sites, such as the Fate Bell and Panther Cave, are the feature attractions of Seminole Canyon, and can be visited by guided tour through the park.

However, I have not yet visited these sites - instead focusing on other areas of the park. On the first visit (March 9th, 2008), I arrived after the park had closed for the day. I walked along the short 'Windmill Trail', a small loop near the visitor's center. This trail leads down to a small year-round spring and the ruins of a water catchment system that was used by local settlers over the past hundred years.

The return trip (September 27, 2008) was much more fruitful - I chose to hike the Rio Grande River Trail, a six-mile out-and-back loop that leads to the far corner of the park, almost a stone's throw from Old Mexico. With recent rains it was fairly lively and green, with countless butterflies passing through on their annual migration. The trail starts alongside the original 'Loop Trail', the 1882 railroad alignment that was abandoned a decade later when a less strenuous route was forged and the Pecos River High Bridge was built.

The trail itself is pretty boring - a flat, featureless hike across a nondescript desert plain. But the main highlight of the hike quickly comes into view. There is a mile-long spur shooting off to the left called the Pressa Trail, which leads to an overlook looking down at a three-way intersection in the Seminole Canyon below. Here, the waters from Lake Amistad many miles away along the Rio Grande peter out; to the right, the waters are wide and deep, muddied from the recent rainstorms. To the left, the two forks of Seminole Canyon are mostly dry. From the top of the overlook, sheer cliffs lead staight down over a hundred feet to the waters below. The view is, well, *breathtaking* - and worth the trip.

Back on the main trail, a few miles later it comes to an abrupt end at the junction where Seminole Canyon merges with the Rio Grande. The location overlooks the Panther Cave pictograms, on the opposite shore far below, accessible only by boat. To the right, a few hundred yards away, are the hills of Mexico. Here, the water is deeper, the canyons steeper, the chasm wider. An impressive view, although not as amazing as the Pressa Trail overlook.

From here, it is a straight hike back along the south portion of the loop, my only companion a great horned toad trying to hide in the gravel of the trail. I would like to return to this park to take the guided tours, and there are other tours available nearby on private land to other pictogram sites as well. And I am told this park is also fabulous for bird watchers as well.

Centris lanipes, U, Face, Puerto Rico_2013-06-27-15.55.31 ZS PMax-Recovered

Check out these animal species images:


Centris lanipes, U, Face, Puerto Rico_2013-06-27-15.55.31 ZS PMax-Recovered
animal species
Image by USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring
A small Centris species take by Sara Prado in Puerto Rico


Araignée au travail (Spider at work) 1/3
animal species
Image by le Haricot
Je l'ai suprise en train de tisser dans sa toile dans le soleil du matin. Quelle merveille de la voir au travail !
Merci si vous pouvez me dire à quelle espèce elle appartient !

I surprised her weaving her web in the morning sun. Seeing her at work is such a nature wonder. Thanks if you can tell me which is her species.


Dead Man's Fingers EOL
animal species
Image by Little Boffin (PeterEdin)
Alcyonium digitatum or dead man's fingers is a species of soft coral in the Alcyoniidae family. The corals forming clumps of yellow, white or cream-coloured fleshy masses of finger-like lobes. The individual polyps are white and translucent, and project from the leathery surface when feeding, giving the colony a furry appearance.

Jason bond photographs spider habitat

Some cool endangered animals images:


Jason bond photographs spider habitat
endangered animals
Image by USFWS/Southeast
The spruce-fir moss spider is an endangered animal found only at the tops of the highest peaks in the eastern United States. This video follows a team of scientists as they search for the rare spider in order to carry specimens back to their lab for genetic analysis which will provide information to help guide future conservation efforts. The team included Dr. Marshal Hedin of San Diego State University; Dr. Fred Coyle, retired from Western Carolina University; Dr. Jason Bond of Auburn University; Service biologist Sue Cameron; and Service intern David Caldwell.
















Credit: Gary Peeples/USFWS
www.fws.gov/asheville



Marshal Hedin searches through moss
endangered animals
Image by USFWS/Southeast
The spruce-fir moss spider is an endangered animal found only at the tops of the highest peaks in the eastern United States. This video follows a team of scientists as they search for the rare spider in order to carry specimens back to their lab for genetic analysis which will provide information to help guide future conservation efforts. The team included Dr. Marshal Hedin of San Diego State University; Dr. Fred Coyle, retired from Western Carolina University; Dr. Jason Bond of Auburn University; Service biologist Sue Cameron; and Service intern David Caldwell.
















Credit: Gary Peeples/USFWS
www.fws.gov/asheville

the animal inside..

Some cool animals video images:


the animal inside..
animals video
Image by NEW ! [WWW.FLICKR.COM/PHOTOS/MILEYLIGHTS]
tehe.
something i wanted to make
when i saw the video preview of this remix
www.youtube.com/watch?v=4C2HdEQ6yQo
i think sounds more cool than the original song haha
hope you like it :E

pookie on the bike

A few nice stuffed toy animals images I found:


pookie on the bike
stuffed toy animals
Image by zen
Photo from a Day in the Life of Asheville event, April 18-19, 2008 in Asheville, NC, USA

Part of the Day In The Life of Asheville photo project, April 18th and 19th 2008.


Giant Lambs
stuffed toy animals
Image by TimmyGUNZ
Stuffed lambs in FAO Schwartz window


3 stuffed cats on a brick wall
stuffed toy animals
Image by wintersoul1

Nice Extinct Animal photos

A few nice extinct animal images I found:


seminolecanyon034
extinct animal
Image by mlhradio
Seminole Canyon State Park, Val Verde County, Texas. One of the more remote state parks, tucked into the southwest corner of Texas about an hour's drive west of Del Rio.

This area has been inhabited since the very earliest days that humans set foot in North America, going back nearly 12,000 years - back during the last Ice Age when the land was more verdant with now-extinct animals still roaming the surrounding prairies and forest. But over the millenia, the climate changed to its current, arid desert landscape - and the Indians adapted.

All through these years, the local Indians drew pictograms all over the surrounding canyon walls and caves. In the dry climate, protected by overhanging rock walls, many of these pictograms survived through the ages. Some of the more famous sites, such as the Fate Bell and Panther Cave, are the feature attractions of Seminole Canyon, and can be visited by guided tour through the park.

However, I have not yet visited these sites - instead focusing on other areas of the park. On the first visit (March 9th, 2008), I arrived after the park had closed for the day. I walked along the short 'Windmill Trail', a small loop near the visitor's center. This trail leads down to a small year-round spring and the ruins of a water catchment system that was used by local settlers over the past hundred years.

The return trip (September 27, 2008) was much more fruitful - I chose to hike the Rio Grande River Trail, a six-mile out-and-back loop that leads to the far corner of the park, almost a stone's throw from Old Mexico. With recent rains it was fairly lively and green, with countless butterflies passing through on their annual migration. The trail starts alongside the original 'Loop Trail', the 1882 railroad alignment that was abandoned a decade later when a less strenuous route was forged and the Pecos River High Bridge was built.

The trail itself is pretty boring - a flat, featureless hike across a nondescript desert plain. But the main highlight of the hike quickly comes into view. There is a mile-long spur shooting off to the left called the Pressa Trail, which leads to an overlook looking down at a three-way intersection in the Seminole Canyon below. Here, the waters from Lake Amistad many miles away along the Rio Grande peter out; to the right, the waters are wide and deep, muddied from the recent rainstorms. To the left, the two forks of Seminole Canyon are mostly dry. From the top of the overlook, sheer cliffs lead staight down over a hundred feet to the waters below. The view is, well, *breathtaking* - and worth the trip.

Back on the main trail, a few miles later it comes to an abrupt end at the junction where Seminole Canyon merges with the Rio Grande. The location overlooks the Panther Cave pictograms, on the opposite shore far below, accessible only by boat. To the right, a few hundred yards away, are the hills of Mexico. Here, the water is deeper, the canyons steeper, the chasm wider. An impressive view, although not as amazing as the Pressa Trail overlook.

From here, it is a straight hike back along the south portion of the loop, my only companion a great horned toad trying to hide in the gravel of the trail. I would like to return to this park to take the guided tours, and there are other tours available nearby on private land to other pictogram sites as well. And I am told this park is also fabulous for bird watchers as well.

Cool Animal Puppy images

Check out these animal puppy images:


Sage, My New Puppy Friend
animal puppy
Image by audreyjm529


Foster puppies Sammi (the brown one) and Snickers (the brindle one)
animal puppy
Image by jennandjon

Cool Animal Control images

Some cool animal control images:


The two coati wrestling for control of the bed
animal control
Image by jon_a_ross
The white nosed Coati were willing to put on a wrestling match for us. One was sleeping while a second headed out to get some food and then tried to return to the nest. At that point a brief (and harmless) struggle broke out. Wrestling back and forth the two Coati played with each other to no effect.

Walking from the Australian display at the calgary zoo towards the old primate house, now renamed 'South America' we passed by the old animal. Once inside the south american display a number of monkeys and other creatures make their homes there.


A brief trip to the Calgary Zoo (www.calgaryzoo.com).


Alfalfa
animal control
Image by David W Oliver
"Alfalfa" from the San Francisco Animal Shelter


Controlling the dinosaur
animal control
Image by Nic Stewart

Dog Looking at and Listening to a Phonograph, "His Master's Voice", The Original RCA Music Puppy Dog Logo Symbol for Advertising

Check out these animal pound images:


Dog Looking at and Listening to a Phonograph, "His Master's Voice", The Original RCA Music Puppy Dog Logo Symbol for Advertising
animal pound
Image by Beverly & Pack
In 1898, three years after Nipper’s death, Francis painted a picture of Nipper listening intently to a wind-up Edison-Bell cylinder phonograph. On February 11, 1899, Francis filed an application for copyright of his picture “Dog Looking At and Listening to a Phonograph.” Thinking the Edison-Bell Company might find it useful, he presented it to James E. Hough who promptly said, “Dogs don’t listen to phonographs.” On May 31, 1899, Francis went to the Maiden Lane offices of The Gramophone Company with the intention of borrowing a brass horn to replace the original black horn on the painting. Manager, William Barry Owen suggested that if the artist replaced the entire machine with a Berliner disc gramophone, the Company would buy the painting. A modified form of the painting became the successful trademark of Victor and HMV records, HMV music stores, and RCA. The trademark itself was registered by Berliner on July 10, 1900. [4] (See HMV for a complete history of the brands based on Nipper.)


Stylized version of Nipper as used by HMV record stores.The slogan “His Master’s Voice” along with the painting were sold to The Gramophone Company for 100 pounds sterling. As Francis Barraud stated about this famous painting: “It is difficult to say how the idea came to me beyond that fact that it suddenly occurred to me that to have my dog listening to the Phonograph, with an intelligent and rather puzzled expression, and call it “His Master’s Voice” would make an excellent subject. We had a phonograph and I often noticed how puzzled he was to make out where the voice came from. It certainly was the happiest thought I ever had.”

This picture is in the public domain.


So I went to Dallas Animal Services ("the pound") with much trepidation. If I wanted to leave information about her I might have had to surrender her. While the front desk worker was bringing up the supervisor to get this figured out I decided to take a
animal pound
Image by WorkingTitle/Gallery 3940


If you can't play with the big dogs...
animal pound
Image by Chili_bob
A fabulous dog, and only 175 pounds!

Running Impalas - Crescent Island, Lake Naivasha, Kenya

Check out these wild animals images:


Running Impalas - Crescent Island, Lake Naivasha, Kenya
wild animals
Image by David d'O
6 September 2009 - Crescent Island, Lake Naivasha, Kenya.

Impala (Aepyceros melampus)

These impalas were running right at the top rim of the hill.

For those who like the biological details:
Click a link and you'll go to the Flickr photo page for that rank in the biological classification.

Phylum: Chordata; Vertebrates / Gewervelden
Class: Mammalia; Mammals / Zoogdieren
Order: Artiodactyla; Even-toed Ungulates / Evenhoevigen
Suborder: Cetruminantia; Ruminants, Whales and Hippos / Herkauwers, Walvissen en Nijlpaarden
Infraorder: Pecora; Ruminants / Herkauwers
Family: Bovidae; Bovids; Antelopes, Gazelles, Buffalos, Sheep, Cattle / Holhoornigen; Antilopen, Gazelles, Buffels, Schapen, Runderen
Subfamily: Aepycerotinae; Impalas / Impala's
Genus: Aepyceros; Impalas / Impala's
Species: Aepyceros melampus; Impala / Impala of Rooibok
Subspecies: Aepyceros melampus melampus; Common Impala / Impala of Rooibok


Running Impalas - Crescent Island, Lake Naivasha, Kenya
wild animals
Image by David d'O
6 September 2009 - Crescent Island, Lake Naivasha, Kenya.

Impala (Aepyceros melampus)

These impalas were running right at the top rim of the hill.

For those who like the biological details:
Click a link and you'll go to the Flickr photo page for that rank in the biological classification.

Phylum: Chordata; Vertebrates / Gewervelden
Class: Mammalia; Mammals / Zoogdieren
Order: Artiodactyla; Even-toed Ungulates / Evenhoevigen
Suborder: Cetruminantia; Ruminants, Whales and Hippos / Herkauwers, Walvissen en Nijlpaarden
Infraorder: Pecora; Ruminants / Herkauwers
Family: Bovidae; Bovids; Antelopes, Gazelles, Buffalos, Sheep, Cattle / Holhoornigen; Antilopen, Gazelles, Buffels, Schapen, Runderen
Subfamily: Aepycerotinae; Impalas / Impala's
Genus: Aepyceros; Impalas / Impala's
Species: Aepyceros melampus; Impala / Impala of Rooibok
Subspecies: Aepyceros melampus melampus; Common Impala / Impala of Rooibok


Impalas - Maasai Mara, Kenya
wild animals
Image by David d'O
4 September 2009 - Maasai Mara, Kenya.

Impala (Aepyceros melampus)

For those who like the biological details:
Click a link and you'll go to the Flickr photo page for that rank in the biological classification.

Phylum: Chordata; Vertebrates / Gewervelden
Class: Mammalia; Mammals / Zoogdieren
Order: Artiodactyla; Even-toed Ungulates / Evenhoevigen
Suborder: Cetruminantia; Ruminants, Whales and Hippos / Herkauwers, Walvissen en Nijlpaarden
Infraorder: Pecora; Ruminants / Herkauwers
Family: Bovidae; Bovids; Antelopes, Gazelles, Buffalos, Sheep, Cattle / Holhoornigen; Antilopen, Gazelles, Buffels, Schapen, Runderen
Subfamily: Aepycerotinae; Impalas / Impala's
Genus: Aepyceros; Impalas / Impala's
Species: Aepyceros melampus; Impala / Impala of Rooibok
Subspecies: Aepyceros melampus melampus; Common Impala / Impala of Rooibok

Leaderboard