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2528 creative works found

  • MY WEBSITE For a Quick Look click / Gorgeous Gods & Goddesses, / Flowers, / Beautiful Places and Things, / Weddings / Pregnancy and Babies

  • Love and friendship doesn’t recognise species boundaries. Click to visit my animal photography & art blog! / Email me at durberville@optushome.com.au Subscribe by Email to Natalie Manuel Photography Find me at Flickr Join my facebook group More of my work on Redbubble* /

  • line drawing, he likes socks just like me

  • we were out for a walk on the quayside in Newcastle and the gulls were going crazy, managed to get this one catching a piece of bread and even managed to get half the tyne bridge in !!!! lucky or what :-)

  • Every good diet should contain your daily intake of brains. Have you got yours?

  • Friendly bird that was happy to be photographed!

  • Just a quick shirt i made to commemorate the pope coming to sydney in a couple of days No offense is intended. be sure to see my other pope shirt: / http://www.redbubble.com/people/xploit/clothing/1401194-1-this-is-an-annoying-t-shirt / not allowing people to wear an annoying shirt during his visit..

  • Mac users want to wear this shirt. Macintosh users would rather use Macs than PCs. “The Box Said Windows XP or Better…So I Got A Mac.”

  • YOU JUST GOT KILLED BY A DAEWOO LANOS MOTHERFUCKER! FUCK THE PO-LICE! Pineapple express

  • A self portrait taken for the Canon Photo5 Competition using the ribbon as the object required in the photo.

  • Mr Robin complaining about the great weight on his head, no wonder he needs an aspirin. / Robin Sony H9 090608 untouched / Small Copper Sony H50 / 120808 background removed / Attempt number 2 at blending with PSE7. Butterfly extracted with PSE7 & superimposed on the robin’s head, a totally daft example of photomanipulation. / 031208 / The robin was photographed at Kilburn Road Allotments and the Small Copper on the campus of the University of York. All profits from my sales will be donated to Butterfly Conservation. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. All images and writing are copyright © jesika 2005-2008. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. picasaweb

  • Winner of the It’s all in the Eyes Challenge of the Exotic Mammals group and / of the The Eye Of The Tiger Challenge of the Eye Contact group. Featured in the Exotic Mammals group, / in the ImageWriting group, / in the Animal Kingdom group, / in the The Beauty of Nature group, / in the Eye Contact group and / in the 300+ Go Long! group. Sumatran Tiger The Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) is a subspecies of tiger found on the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Recent genetic testing has revealed the presence of unique genetic markers, which isolate Sumatran tigers from all mainland subspecies. Currently, there are only 100-400 Sumatran tigers left in the wild. Like most wild cats, Sumatran tigers are solitary animals that live within marked, carefully guarded territory. Hunting begins at dusk and is by no means easy: tigers may travel more than 20 miles to find suitable prey, and will successfully catch their target only one out of every ten or twenty attempts. PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS: The Sumatran Tiger is the smallest of all tiger subspecies. Male Sumatran tigers average 204 cm (6 feet, 8 inches) in length from head to tail and weigh about 136 kg. Females average 198 cm (6 feet, 6 inches) in length and weigh about 91 kg (200 lb). Its stripes are narrower than other subspecies of tigers’ stripes, and it has a more bearded and maned appearance, especially the males. Its small size makes it easier to move through dense rain forests. It has webbing between its toes that, when spread, makes Sumatran tigers very fast swimmers. It has been known to drive hoofed prey into the water, especially if the prey animal is a slow swimmer. DIET: Sumatran Tigers commonly prey on larger ungulates, like Wild Boar, Malayan Tapir and deer, and sometimes also smaller animals, like fowl, monkeys, and fish. Orangutans could be prey, but since they spend a minimal amount of time on the ground, tigers rarely catch one. HABITAT: The Sumatran tiger is only found naturally in Sumatra, a large island in western Indonesia. It lives anywhere from lowland forests to mountain forest and inhabits many unprotected areas. Only about 400 live in game reserves and national parks, The largest population of about 110 tigers lives in Gunung Leuser National Park. Another 100 live in unprotected areas that will soon be lost and the rest are spread out in areas that are quickly being lost to agriculture. The reserves are not safe because, despite conservation efforts, many tigers are killed by poachers each year. The Sumatran Tiger is found only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra in habitat that ranges from lowland forest to sub mountain and mountain forest including some peat swamp forests. According the Tiger Information Centre and the World Wildlife Fund there are no more than 500 of these tigers left in the wild with some estimates considerably lower. For the most part, these tigers are solitary, with the only basic social unit being the mother and her young. Males rarely associate with a specific female and may claim a territory containing several females. Territories are marked with scents on bushes or other plants; scratches on trees, or scrapes on the ground, which generally help to eliminate possible confrontations. Mating typically occurs in winter or spring, and the mother will give birth to two to four cubs. She raises them alone and they will be totally dependent on her for food until about 18 months. At about two years the cubs will become independent, and will reach full maturity at about three and a half years for females and five years for males. Average life span is 15 years but they may reach up to 26 years in captivity. Analysis of DNA is consistent with the hypothesis that the Sumatran Tigers have been isolated after a rise in sea level at the Pleistocene to Holocene border (about 12,000-6,000 years ago) from other tiger populations. In agreement with this evolutionary history, the Sumatran Tiger is genetically isolated from all living mainland tigers, which form a distinct group, closely related among each other. STATUS: Critically Endangered. Continued agricultural habitat destruction, poaching, and killing of tigers that come into contact with villagers, all intensify the crises surrounding tiger. The continuing loss of habitat is intensifying the crises to save this tiger. In August of 2009, thieves broke into the Taman Rimba Zoo on Sumatra and poached a female Sumatran Tiger. / (Source: Wikipedia) / / Picture made in LA Zoo Canon EOS 40D / Canon Zoom lens EF 90-300mm 1:4,5-5,6 USM / Exposure time 1/500s / Aperture value f/5 / ISO 800 / Focal length300 mm

  • Fictional / ROUBLE 40×40 cm / Acrylics & Gouache on canvas — / / — © All images copyright ROUBLE RUST / Spyridoula Bleta / All the images in this gallery are copyrighted, are NOT part of public domain & may not be reproduced, copied, edited, transmitted, uploaded, downloaded, or published in any way without my permission. Any violation of this copyright law will result in a lawsuit.

  • Stock used: / Barn / ground

  • Thanks Pin Up Girl Nat / Thanks Andy and Yellow Flat 34. / one from the vault / series

  • My son Kempton, has just discovered earthworms! / Shot with my canon xsi rebel

  • This sister image is here and there you will find a story littered with history and love… I had to take all this photo’s upside down as the wind kept blowing them up the wrong way! was quite interesting… don’t you just love old photo’s.. nowadays these textured and edited pictures are our “old” images but the real old ones are far better! :) Featured on the feature page / Young Enthusiasts / Featured Features

  • This kind of sums up my week so far. Some times words just aren’t necessary

  • / / “love is the flower you’ve got to let grow” (quote by John Lennon) drawing coloured digitally / / Progression / / ... more progression

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