In the late afternoon light of the Serengeti, two Impala try to resolve a squabble. ID: F1_5326
Acrylic on Canvas / 2007-Original Avaliable
Arabian Gazelle at dusk in the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve, UAE / / ©2008 Shannon Plummer. All Rights Reserved. / www.shannonplummerphotography.com / / / /
All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. / © 2008 Forest Friends Photography: using this image for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action. Here you wild a close up of an Gazelle’s Face
Hand drawn and rendered in Illustrator. Like this? I can do similar – just ask.
Drawing in pen.
2 B pencil drawing
Pen drawing
Nope, I hadn’t heard of it, but it looked as elegant as all the other gazelles so I decided to attempt a painting of it. Mixed media on board. 45cm x 30cm
Dainty little Dorcas Gazelle at Marwell Zoo, Hampshire, England. (Background removed).
This little gazelle was enjoying a nice little snack of thorns, I think I would just eat the grass lol.
Two young Cheetah eating a freshly killed Thompsons Gazelle. taken in the Masai Mara, Kenya.
enjoy!
We watched this small Indian Gazelle or Chinkara in the Kundal Biodiversity Reserve, a part of the Ranthambhore National Park, India. The Chinkara is an endangered species on the IUCN Red List but thankfully categorised as of Least Concern. Population of 100,000 worldwide. They are a really beautiful species!
A stylised Art Deco relief of a leaping gazelle.
Baby Dama Gazelle - / Critically Endangered / Canon EOS 30D The Dama Gazelle (Nanger dama formerly Gazella dama), also known as the Addra Gazelle, is a species of gazelle. It lives in Africa in the Sahara desert and migrates south in search of food during the dry season. After the rains return and the desert plants turn green, they move north back to the Sahara. Poaching and destruction of their habitat have greatly diminished their numbers, and they no longer live in large herds. It is white with a tannish-brown head and neck. The Dama Gazelle also has a subspecies, the Mhorr Gazelle, Nanger dama mhorr, which is extinct in the wild. Its numbers have fallen by 80% over the last decade, and the Dama Gazelle is now listed as Critically Endangered, though there are still 2000 left. They occur in poor countries and little action is taken to protect the species, the national parks are not well guarded and poachings still occur. Captive populations are managed in zoos in Africa and America.
Standing…
I took this photo in April 2006 at the Real Aeroplane Company at Breighton Airfield in Yorkshire. / It’s a Westland SA-341c GAZELLE HT2. Civ reg, G-BXZD. RN ser no. XW895 / Livery is Royal Navy Flying Shark Display Team. / / I was using an even older pocket digital camera then. / Pentax Optio S5n. x3 optical lens / 1/320sec @ F5.6 ISO 80. / Focal length at 35mm, 62 mm
Come little Gazelle, come eat the good grass….! Busch Gardens, Tampa, Florida This image has been featured in these excellent groups : / - Statues And Such / - Amateur Art Photography / - Image Writing / - Town Giants / - Outsiders olympus SP 570 UZ (challenge photos o’ green of the amateur art photography group)
Mother and baby Gerenuk – Samburu National Park, Kenya. The Gerenuk is a small, delicate antelope which lives in the remote desert areas of Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia. The elongated neck allows it to browse higher up than other antelopes its size. Gerenuks can often be seen feeding erect – standing on their hind legs.
The Cheetah The fastest land animal in the world, the cheetah is a marvel of evolution. The cheetah’s slender, long-legged body is built for speed. Cheetahs are tan in color with black spots all over their bodies. They can also be distinguished from other big cats by their smaller size, spotted coats, small heads and ears and distinctive “tear stripes” that stretch from the corner of the eye to the side of the nose. Found mostly in open and partially open savannah, cheetahs rely on tall grasses for camouflage when hunting. They are diurnal (more active in the day) animals and hunt mostly during the late morning or early evening. Only half of the chases, which last from 20-60 seconds, are successful. Cheetahs knock their prey to the ground and kill with a suffocating bite to the neck. They must eat quickly before they lose the kills to other bigger or more aggressive carnivores. Cheetahs are also typically solitary animals. While males sometimes live with a small group of brothers from the same litter, females generally raise cubs by themselves for about a year. Height 2 ½ -3 feet at shoulders / Length 44-53 inches (tail length of 26-33 inches) / Weight 110-140 pounds Top Speed 70mph Lifespan 10-12 years Diet Gazelles, wildebeest calves, impalas and smaller hoofed animals Threats The cheetah’s future is uncertain due to a variety of threats. The biggest is habitat loss due to human encroachment. In addition, they often deal with declines in prey and conflicts with humans. There is also high cub mortality due to predation by carnivores like lions and hyenas that are in competition with the cheetah, as well as genetic inbreeding which leads to abnormalities.
The Cheetah The fastest land animal in the world, the cheetah is a marvel of evolution. The cheetah’s slender, long-legged body is built for speed. Cheetahs are tan in color with black spots all over their bodies. They can also be distinguished from other big cats by their smaller size, spotted coats, small heads and ears and distinctive “tear stripes” that stretch from the corner of the eye to the side of the nose. Found mostly in open and partially open savannah, cheetahs rely on tall grasses for camouflage when hunting. They are diurnal (more active in the day) animals and hunt mostly during the late morning or early evening. Only half of the chases, which last from 20-60 seconds, are successful. Cheetahs knock their prey to the ground and kill with a suffocating bite to the neck. They must eat quickly before they lose the kills to other bigger or more aggressive carnivores. Cheetahs are also typically solitary animals. While males sometimes live with a small group of brothers from the same litter, females generally raise cubs by themselves for about a year. Height 2 ½ -3 feet at shoulders / Length 44-53 inches (tail length of 26-33 inches) / Weight 110-140 pounds Top Speed 70mph Lifespan 10-12 years Diet Gazelles, wildebeest calves, impalas and smaller hoofed animals Threats The cheetah’s future is uncertain due to a variety of threats. The biggest is habitat loss due to human encroachment. In addition, they often deal with declines in prey and conflicts with humans. There is also high cub mortality due to predation by carnivores like lions and hyenas that are in competition with the cheetah, as well as genetic inbreeding which leads to abnormalities. ””EYE CONTACT”” was featured in Eye Macros
An imperious-looking impala set against a silver background, while a fantastical bird rests upon his horns. Original artwork measures 11×15” and uses oil pastels, 18K gold leaf pen, metallic paints, colored pencils, and art pens on light blue watercolor paper.
model ella english / photographer alexander n.
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