A Frog Riding a Beetle: Is This a Real Wildlife Photo?

A Frog Riding a Beetle: Is This a Real Wildlife Photo or a Bunch of BS? Photos of a frog riding a beetle have been flooding the Internet over the past month. Think it looks cute and adorable? Reactions to the series of photos have been split between blind praise and outrage over the authenticity of the photo-story and welfare of the subjects.

So, did this scene really occur naturally as claimed?  Read more… A Frog Riding a Beetle: Is This a Real Wildlife Photo or a Bunch of BS?.

The endangered Jaguar makes a comeback in Brazil

Goias, Brazil is known as the heartland of the country’s agriculture. With thousands of acres designated to sugar cane, soy and cattle, it might not be the typical environment for the endangered Jaguar. According to a research conducted by Leandro Silveira of the Jaguar Conservation Fund, this magnificent predator continues to adapt to a changing ecosystem.

“Before we started this study there was no knowledge that jaguars would inhabit this kind of environment,“ Silveira said.

The study used GPS technology and trail cameras to track the movement of the big cats. His data concluded jaguars can in fact survive within an agricultural landscape.

Read more… The endangered Jaguar makes a comeback in Brazil | CCTV America.

African wildlife in beautiful black and white.

African wildlife photography by David Gulden – in pictures | Art and design | The Guardian

Stunning black-and-white images of African wildlife and the the decline of their habitats are the focus of a new book by David Gulden. Shooting mainly in Kenya over a 15-year period, Gulden’s photographs are intimate portraits of animals as individual characters, rather than representative of their species.

African wildlife photography by David Gulden – in pictures | Art and design | The Guardian

See more… African wildlife photography by David Gulden – in pictures | Art and design | The Guardian.

Photographer Paul Souders drone captures images of Botswanas wildlife.

After more than 30 years behind the lens, award-winning wildlife photographer Paul Souders decided to let someone – or rather something – else do most of the hard work for him.

The 53-year-old American snapper has traveled to every conceivable corner of the world in his quest to capture animals in their natural habitat, but for his latest shoot Paul put decided to put his feet up and put his trust in a drone.

Paul traveled 10,000 miles from his home in Seattle to Chobe National Park in Botswana for the shoot, which he took using his DJI Phantom Vision 2+drone operated via a hand-held remote control.

See more:
Photographer Paul Souders drone captures images of Botswanas wildlife | Daily Mail Online.

Whats a Black Panther, Really?

Whats a Black Panther, Really?

A “black panther” is not its own species—it’s an umbrella term that refers to any big cat with a black coat.

The condition is caused by the agouti gene, which regulates the distribution of black pigment within the hair shaft, according to the University of California, Davis. It’s most well known in leopards, which live in Asia and Africa, and jaguars, inhabitants of South America. (Domestic cat lovers might be interested to know the agouti gene doesn’t cause black fur in house cats.)

Read more… Whats a Black Panther, Really?.

Ugly 5 safari: Tracking Africas least glamorous animals in Botswana

CNN’s Laura Ma gives her list of Africa’s Ugly Five.

Marabou stork

“That’s the ugliest bird I’ve ever seen.”

The statement doesn’t so much roll off my tongue as it stumbles out of my mouth as I look at the scrappy tufts of feather on the leathery head of a marabou stork.

Others on the boat mutter similar sentiments.

“It’s one of the Ugly Five,” says Amos, our captain and guide on an afternoon safari cruise at Moremi Game Reserve in Botswana’s Okavango River Delta.

His enthusiasm feels exaggerated for such a hideous bird.

Elephants can be seen while flying into the delta, freeing up safari time searching for less celebrated wildlife.
Safaris tend to focus on the so-called Big Five — lions, leopards, buffalo, rhinos, elephants — but the Ugly Five makes for a fun alternative for anyone who’s already checked off the safari stars.

The list runs like a cast call for the “Lion King’s” least majestic animals: marabou stork, hyena, vulture, wildebeest and warthog.

The marabou stork doesn’t just rely on its looks — it’s also got a scent thing going down.

“They can grow up to five feet long,” says Amos as we get close enough to see the scabby-looking beak of one these large birds.

“And be glad it’s not close enough that you can smell him.”

Everyone, except our guide, cringes as the bird spreads its malodorous 12-foot wings and takes off from a tree, giving us a full view of its underbelly and wrinkly throat sack.

The Okavango Delta is one of two breeding grounds for the marabou stork.

During mating season, the birds are known to eat live prey, including adult flamingos.

The stork also goes by the name of the “undertaker bird” in recognition of the grim but important role it plays in the Delta — reducing diseases and cleaning up the ecosystem by devouring rotten carcasses.

Hyena

One the next morning’s bush walk, we get lucky in spotting a hyena.

We’re certainly luckier than the smelly dead animal it’s devouring.

“Your nose is the strongest tracker of game,” says Amos.

Apparently, your ears are the second, but we’re alerted to the hyena’s presence not by its notorious cackling laugh but by the sound of the bones it’s crunching.

We peer over the brush to see a spotted hyena with its snout in the stomach of an impala.

Before anyone can ask, our guide says: “It probably didn’t steal this meal from lions. Hyenas are very successful hunters.”

The hyena registers low on the cuteness meter. This one couldn’t get any more ugly unless it was covered in blood.

Which it is.

My friend Anja, disagrees, claiming that hyenas are so unattractive they’re actually endearing.

“They’re only ugly because they’re villains in movies,” she says.

It’s debatable how cute this hyena cub is.
Showing me a photo of a hyena cub her sister took in South Africa’s Kruger National Park, she adds, “The babies are so cute!”

That’s debatable, but they certainly get uglier with age.

As we’re watching, our hyena pulls its bloody face out of the carcass, revealing its elongated neck, hunched gait and dirty, scrappy fur.

Vulture

With one of the strongest jaws in the animal world, hyenas don’t leave much for scavengers.

Even so, where there are carcasses, there are usually vultures.

While the marabou is the only species of stork on the list, the entire vulture family can claim membership to the ugly club.

Circling overhead in a flying “kettle” (unusual collective noun alert!), the vultures we see aren’t too bad to look at.

Their wings silhouette magnificently against the blue sky.

The illusion is broken when a few fly down to compete with the hyena for impala meat, revealing that though they have the wings of an eagle, they have the face of Freddy Kruger.

It’s no surprise the bird’s hooked beak and hunched stature have inspired a marvel comic villain.

“Their ugliness is efficient,” says Amos. (He says that about all the Ugly Five.)

The curved beak is effective in ripping meat, according to our guide. The vulture’s ugliest feature, the featherless head and neck, is easy to keep clean after eating carrion.

Logistically, it makes sense.

Esthetically, it’s the stuff of nightmares.

Warthog

The warthog is another case of practicality over prettiness.

These wild pigs are plagued with useful but unappealing warts on both sides of their faces, landing them firmly in the ugly crowd.

The protuberances protect the faces of male warthogs when they fight, even if they do look like surgery gone wrong.

Warthogs are plentiful in the Okavango Delta. Anywhere out of scent-range from carnivores, we see warthog families digging for roots with their front knuckles.

Together with warts, shaggy mohawks down their backs and uneven body hair, the warthog is the least appealing pig in the delta (although their roasted ribs are delicious.)

They’re shaped like torpedoes with pig noses.

Their bodies seem disproportionately stocky in comparison to their skinny legs and short necks.

As we’re watching a mother and two babies, someone in our group steps on a twig and spooks them.

We’re treated to the beautiful sight of warthog butts with tails straight up in the air.

Wildebeest

During an afternoon heading out from the Delta’s Moremi Crossing resort in a mokoro dug-out canoe, we cross paths with the last of the Ugly Five: wildebeest.

As we slosh from one end of the small herd to another, a dozen weary black faces with straggly manes stare us down, perhaps concerned we might try to eat them.

Attractiveness is no problem for wildebeests. They’re practically blind.
Because they’re one of the most populous safari animals — and not much to look at — many people don’t bother to photograph them, says Amos.

As the unpretty cousin of the more elegant eland and gazelle, the wildebeest is a peculiar genetic mishmash.

It has the head of a buffalo, body of an antelope and tail of a shaggy horse.

Its elongated face is connected to a dirty-looking neck fringe and features a mouth shaped, and used, like a lawnmower.

Murky gray bodies decorated with black and white markings add to the unkempt appearance.

“Its ugliness is no problem for mating, they’re practically blind,” Amos laughs.

Read more… Ugly 5 safari: Tracking Africas least glamorous animals in Botswana 

Wildlife pictures from Bognor Regis to South Africa are among top nature images of the year

Wildlife pictures from Bognor Regis to South Africa are among top nature images of the year | Daily Mail Online

Two frogs use a leaf as a brolly to shelter from the rain: Amazing wildlife pictures from Bognor Regis to South Africa are among top nature images of the year. The amazing images, taken by both professional and amateur photographers, were the winners and runners-up of a competition by The Society of International Nature and Wildlife Photographers.

Taken from all around the world, from Sussex to South Africa, the photographs capture the stunning forms of wildlife, with close-up shots giving an incredible insight into their life.

Read more… Wildlife pictures from Bognor Regis to South Africa are among top nature images of the year | Daily Mail Online.

Hedge-Fund Manager Makes Millions Moonlighting as Wildlife Photographer

A black-and-white photograph of a charging rhinoceros dominates one wall of David Yarrow’s $230 million hedge-fund firm, Clareville Capital Partners LLP, in London. Unlike the art that hangs in the offices of most highflying hedge funds, however, the image is not the creation of an outside artist but rather of the money manager himself. Yarrow, 48, took the impossibly up-close picture in Kenya last year, and in early September sold a print of the image to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge — aka Prince William and Kate Middleton — who have since had it installed in their Georgian mansion in Norfolk.

Few hedge-fund managers can successfully oversee millions while pursuing a lucrative side career. Yet Yarrow has done just that by reinventing himself as a wildlife photographer, with exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery and Christie’s in London and a show at New York’s Rotella Gallery in October. Since last autumn, Yarrow has sold more than $1.7 million worth of prints, donating 10 percent of the proceeds to Tusk, a charity that works to halt the trade in ivory and rhino horn in Africa.

See more… Hedge-Fund Manager Makes Millions Moonlighting as Wildlife Photographer  – Bloomberg.

Request for entries: the 2015 Sony World Photography Awards

With just over one month remaining for photographers to enter the 2015 Sony World Photography Awards, the World Photography Organisation reveals a selection of submissions to the 2015 Open competition.

Entries to the Open and Youth competitions of the 2015 Sony World Photography Awards will close on 5 January 2015, followed by the deadline for the Professional competition on 8 January. All competitions are free to enter via http://www.worldphoto.org.

Professional and amateur photographers can compete across 25 categories for cash prizes and Sony digital imaging equipment. One professional photographer will be awarded the title of L’Iris d’Or/Sony World Photography Awards Photographer of the Year at a gala ceremony held in London on 23 April 2015.

More images… 2015 Sony World Photography Awards: Beautiful wildlife and landscape images.

Hoverfly kissing a thistle wins photo competition

Photos of flies, fish, snakes, seabirds, a decapitated butterfly and even a decaying zebra have been recognised in the British Ecological Society’s annual photo competition.

More than 200 entries were received – a new record for the competition – showing scenes of the natural world spanning Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe.

The winning shot was taken in a back garden in Sweden by Alejandro Ruete, a PhD student at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. He called his photo, which shows a hoverfly perched delicately on a globe thistle, “Kiss in the backyard”.

A shot of an elephant matriarch leading her family to water was highly commended by the judges.

See more… BBC News – Hoverfly kissing a thistle wins photo competition.