National wildlife Wall Art

816 creative works found

  • In a thread about the boardwalks in Cradle Mountain National Park I promised I would upload a photo of a wombat I photographed on the boardwalk. I was so amazed at how close I could get to these beautiful wild creatures! This was taken from about 1 metre away.

  • Softness Of Twilight with a white-tailed deer watching a bear that is behind me an not pictured.To view the bear go to the image titled “Black Bear”.The deer in my “Mountain Life” image were also lookin at the same bear….I was in the middle of all 3 shots…the deer watchin the bear watch me

  • Taken at Yellowstone National Park, I caught the golden eagle, viewed better enlarged. I used my Canon EOS, Rebel XT. I had not had the camera long when we went there. I did not use a tri-pod. This shot is as is. It was taken right before sundown. footnote: was featured in waterfalls a long time ago, and one other I can’t remember, it was within my first month with RedBubble. The lower falls descend from the 590,000 year old Canyon Rhyolite lava flow. The lower falls of the Yellowstone is still the largest volume major waterfall in the Rocky Mountains of the United States. The volume of water flowing over the falls can vary from 63,500 USgal/s (240 m³/s) at peak runoff to 5,000 USgal/s (19 m³/s) in the fall. Over the years the estimates of the height of Lower Falls has varied dramatically. In 1851 Jim Bridger estimated its height at 250 feet. One outrageous newspaper story from 1867 placed its height at “thousands of feet”. A map from 1869 gives the falls its current name of Lower Falls for the first time and estimates the height at 350 feet.

  • 8 point white-tailed buck standing on a hill, in the edge of a field, on a foggy morning…......odocoileus virginianus….Image taken in Cades Cove,GSMNP

  • This is an uncropped version of the same photo I posted earlier today. 50% of any sales of this photo will be donated to the worldbirdsanctuary.org

  • During the height of a fall rut a majestic bull elk displays a proud posture among a field of dry grass. I especially like the small bird along for a ride on his back.

  • Featured in AMERICA’s National Parks and Wildlife Habitat Nikon D200, AF-S Nikkon 200-400mm f4G-ED-IF VR lens with 1.4 teleconverter

  • Pinto wild Assateague Island ponies walking toward the beach early spring 2008. Taken with an Olympus E-510 w/ 40 mm lens. /

  • Nairobi National Park – Kenya Savannah, endless grasslands – home for so many animals… These two Impala males took their time to forage along the road, quite at ease with our tourist car, waiting for them to clear the road… it was a pleasure observing these gracious animals in their natural surroundings. Impala or Rooibok (Aepyceros melampus) (wikipedea http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impala ) Photo made with pentax ME Super film camera and scanned from print. Comments and feed-back always welcome. Thanks for looking :) See more of my Nairobi National Park- Kenya series / Features and wins This work received a top 10 placement in the Whats on your road challenge from ‘Country Roads around the world’ group It also received a top 10 placement in the challenge Impala’s and was featured in the group Indigenous to East- and Southern Africa (Sept 27, 2009) / Featured in Which way (Dec 8, 1009) Thank you so much to these groups, and to those who voted! / Zebra – all stripes

  • Birds perch on the bones of a dead tree as the rising sun lights up a streaked sky. St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, on Florida’s eastern panhandle gulf coast. Photographed with Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ50 (10MP/12x Leica lens).

  • From the World Bird Sanctuary in Missouri.

  • Nikon D50 / 2008/09/08 15:35:12.6 / Image Size: 3900×2400 / Lens: / Focal Length: 135mm / Exposure Mode: / Metering Mode: Multi-Pattern / 1/1000 sec – F/4.5 / Exposure Comp.: 0 EV CAPTURED LOCATION: ‘THE KRUGER NATIONAL PARK’ South Africa GREAT TUSKERS OF THE “ KRUGER NATIONAL PARK” SOUTH AFRICA / I WAS FORTUNATE ENOUGH WITH THIS SHOT TO CAPTURE “TWO” TUSKERS ! “There is no creature in Africa quite as dramatic, as imposing or as regal as the elephant. He is the true king of beasts, the largest land mammal on earth, beside whom the lion is a mere courier and before whom the powerful rhino, hippo and buffalo and all else give way. In his pure environment this majestic giant of up to six or seven tons has no natural enemies for he is not a predator and there is non large enough to challenge him. If there were music in the wild he would surely move to the strains of Beethoven, such is his ponderous grace and awesome presence / Since recorded history the elephant has captured the imagination of man more firmly than any other animal – initially in the Far East, where he was trained as a friend and a worker, a formidable ally in the battle or on hunt, and a symbol of monarchy. Modern man latter rediscovered the elephant in Africa, where he and early primitive peoples has existed in relatively peaceful parallel for aeons, and found him to be untrainable, unlike the Indian elephant, but a rich source of ivory. Thus man became and still is the greatest enemy. Lions are the only other because young elephants are sometimes killed by them. / Since then the existence of this extra-ordinary gentle sage species has been in steady decline. Only a few hundred years ago elephants inhabited the length and breadth of Africa, from the Maiombe forests in West Africa across the high slopes of the Ruwenzori Mountains in Uganda to the coral beaches of East Africa. ” KRUGER PORTRAIT OF A NATIONAL PARK” by David Paynter with Wilf Nussey

  • This is the San Antonio Creek in the Valles Caldera National Preserve, Jemez Mountains, New Mexico. The Valles Caldera is located on NM Highway 4, AKA, The Jemez Trail . Geographically, the Jemez Mountains are located in northern New Mexico, near Los Alamos . Now to the park. A caldera is a large crater formed by volcanic explosion or by collapse of a volcanic cone. The Valles Caldera National Preserve began life as the 89,000 acre Baca land grant. Land grants have their roots in the earliest colonial days of the 16th and 17th centuries, when large parcels were handed out by the Spanish crown. The Caldera became a National Preserve in 2000. Other than for special events, the Valles Caldera is open only to small groups. By charter, it must become self-sufficient within the next ten years. To that end, much of the land is given over to a massive ranching operation and there are special hunts and fishing claims that are sold by lottery. The trout in this little stream are said to be phenomenal! Over the years, the Caldera has been home to many film projects. Movies filmed here include The Missing , Seraphim Falls, Buffalo Girls and Shootout. Stars who have walked these hills include Gregory Peck, Kenny Rogers, Tom Selleck, Tommy Lee Jones, Anjelica Huston, and Ron Howard. On the day this photo was taken, a Bollywood crew was filming “Mail Order Bride”. Look for it at a Majal near you. Pentax K20D, 1/120 @ F22, ISO 400, 18mm

  • “El Puma” The Mountain Lion – Cougar – connotes leadership, courage, power, swiftness and balance, courage and ability to move unseen.

  • The mule deer at Bandelier National Monument are not tame, but they are frighteningly unaffected by human presence. As a group of us walked one of the trails we suddenly found ourselves in the middle of a small herd of them, some on one side of the path and some on the other. They were so intent on their business that I had to cluck and wave my hand to get them to look at us. With that goofy grin, the wet nose, and the mule deer equivalent of a lamp shade on its head, this one seemed the “life of the party”.

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Spotted Mountain Grasshopper (Southern pyrgomorph) Ben Lomond National Park, Tasmania, Australia. The Spotted Mountain Grasshopper generally refers to one of a number of types of alpine grasshopper – Monistria concinna, or Southern pyrgomorph. It occurs in eight different forms, each with its own distinct colour, which is likely to be an adaptation to its particular environment. The species itself occurs on the east coast from Northern New South Wales to Victoria and Tasmania. The ability of these grasshoppers to tolerate freezing conditions is attributed to an anti-freeze type substance called Sorbitol that has been found in the haemolymph (blood) of these individuals. The majority of insects do die when temperatures reach below freezing i.e. less than 0 degrees as they are deficient in this substance. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/160sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • I cought this grizzly fishing for salmons in a river just outside Haines (Alaska). The river was full of huge salmons swimming upstream towards Chilkoot Lake where more bears were waiting for them. It was a thrilling experience watching them swimming around, catching and eating the fish.

  • Bonnet macaque (macaca radiata) posing in Bandipur National Park, India.

  • The Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) is a bird of prey found in North America that is most recognizable as the national bird and symbol of the United States of America. This sea eagle has two known sub-species and forms a species pair with the White-tailed Eagle. Its range includes most of Canada and Alaska, all of the contiguous United States and northern Mexico. It is found near large bodies of open water with an abundant food supply and old-growth trees for nesting. The fractalius filter was added to this image to fine tune it, both for saturation and detail.

  • just as we were exciting from a very long hike – this little guy shows up – and was just as curious about us as we were of him…....fairly large animal size of a small cat…....beautiful coat and with lots of personality for a wild one Marathon ONtario

  • This poor beautiful wombat, was out and about at 1pm in the afternoon wanting to cross the Acheron Way, In The Marysville National Park, I stopped my car and got out he didnt move actually he could hear me but he was blind so he couldnt see me and he was limping, I stood about 10 metres away from him, every so often he would put his nose in the air and sniff the air, I stood down wind from him, so he couldnt smell me, but he must of heard me as i photographed him. / (It was a pretty stupid thing for me to do looking back and photographing him as they are very territorial and will attack people, I have heard of people having there buttocks ripped off by a wombat and another person being bitten by a wombat on the calf of there leg. Wombats can out run a human being over a short distance say 100 metres, so its best that you keep out of there way and dont try photographing a wombat that can see.) / / There was bracken, moss, to eat no other source of food within in a km of where i took this photo, as the vegetation had been burnt down by The Black saturday Bushfires. He had a good 500 metre walk down the mountain to get to The Acheron River. Sony a 300, / hand held camera, / 400 ISO All I could think was where was the animal rescue, as this fella didnt hang around for long and needed some help.

  • Cheetah cub with mother – Sparki /

  • Rising Sun area adjacent to Rose Creek, Glacier National Park, Montana, USA / Black Bear 17 Sept 2009 1829 hrs / Nikon D2X / Nikkor 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 VR / Shot from sunroof of car 270mm / ISO 400 0EV / F/5.6 1/90 sec

  • Two Giraffe in the southern part of the Kruger National Park, South Africa just before the sun went down. As I didn’t want to startle the animals, no flash or other lighting was used. There was just enough light to capture the desired effect. Featured in: / The World Is Us. Dec. 2009 / Around The World. Dec. 2009 / Live,Love, Dream. Dec. 2009 / Affection. Jan. 2010

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