25/06/2025
Great white pelican
Credits sitapara
“Until one has loved an animal, a part of one’s soul remains unawakened.” –Anatole France#animals #wildlifephotography #wildlife #save_forest
25/06/2025
Great white pelican
Credits sitapara
24/06/2025
Saiga Antelope 🐪
Meet the antelope with a built-in air filter! 🌬️ The saiga’s oversized, droopy nose isn’t just quirky — it filters dust and cools the air as it roams the dry, windswept steppes of Central Asia. A bizarre beauty built for survival! 🏜️🦌
23/06/2025
Fossa 🐾
Madagascar’s mystery predator! 🐾 The fossa looks like a strange blend of cat, dog, and mongoose — but it’s in a class of its own. Agile, elusive, and powerful, it’s the island’s top hunter and a lemur’s worst nightmare. 🌴🦴
22/06/2025
Quokka 😄
Say cheese! 🧀 This adorable Aussie marsupial is known as the “happiest animal on Earth” — and for good reason. With its constant grin and friendly nature, the quokka is a selfie superstar and a symbol of pure joy from Rottnest Island! 📸🇦🇺
21/06/2025
The eternal teenager of the animal kingdom! Native to Mexico, this unique salamander never fully grows up—it skips metamorphosis and keeps its feathery gills forever. A real-life science marvel with regenerative powers and a permanent smile! 🌊✨
19/06/2025
Nature’s armored guardian! The only mammal fully covered in protective scales, the pangolin rolls into a tight ball when danger strikes—like a living pinecone shield. 🐾🌿 Mysterious, shy, and sadly endangered, this nocturnal insect-eater needs our protection more than ever.
17/06/2025
The Aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) is a nocturnal lemur native to Madagascar, known for its eerie appearance and unusual feeding habits. Its most striking feature is an elongated, bony middle finger, which it uses in a unique form of foraging called percussive foraging. The Aye-aye taps on wood to locate hollow chambers where insects reside. Once detected, it gnaws a hole using its continuously growing incisors, then inserts its thin middle finger to extract the prey. This method is similar to echolocation and highlights the Aye-aye’s keen hearing and tactile sensitivity. Although it looks strange, the finger functions much like nature’s own creepy chopstick. Unfortunately, due to its ghostly appearance and misunderstood behavior, the Aye-aye is often feared by locals and faces threats from habitat loss and superstition. It is currently listed as endangered and is a focus of conservation efforts.
28/04/2025
- The African sacred ibis (Threskiornis aethiopicus) is a species of ibis, a wading bird of the family Threskiornithidae.
- Photo courtesy of Hisao Kanno!
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