Archive for the “National Geographic” Category

Beautiful Photos Of Animals

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Beluga Whales Photography

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The Underwater Photography of Brian_Skerry 

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Best Photography 2010 _6 

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Swim_with_whale_3

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The_beluga_whale_3

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Friendship with a shark 1

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The ocean sunfish Mola mola

The ocean sunfish, Mola mola, or common mola, is the heaviest known bony fish in the world. It has an average adult weight of 1,000 kg (2,200 lb). The species is native to tropical and temperate waters around the globe. It resembles a fish head with a tail, and its main body is flattened laterally. Sunfish can be as tall as they are long when their dorsal and ventral fins are extended.

Sunfish live on a diet that consists mainly of jellyfish, but because this diet is nutritionally poor, they consume large amounts in order to develop and maintain their great bulk. Females of the species can produce more eggs than any other known vertebrate.[1] Sunfish fry resemble miniature pufferfish, with large pectoral fins, a tail fin and body spines uncharacteristic of adult sunfish.

Adult sunfish are vulnerable to few natural predators, but sea lions, orcas and sharks will consume them. Among humans, sunfish are considered a delicacy in some parts of the world, including Japan, the Korean peninsula and Taiwan, but sale of their flesh is banned in the European Union.[2] Sunfish are frequently, though accidentally, caught in gillnets, and are also vulnerable to harm or death from encounters with floating trash, such as plastic bags.

A member of the order Tetraodontiformes, which also includes pufferfish, porcupinefish and filefish, the sunfish shares many traits common to members of this order. It was originally classified as Tetraodon mola under the pufferfish genus, but it has since been given its own genus, Mola, with two species under it. The ocean sunfish, Mola mola, is the type species of the genus.

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Cano Cristales 1

The following photographs correspond to Cano Cristales, a very special river which is usually called “The most beautiful river in the world”.
The colors shown in these pictures are absolutely real and there aren’t any photographic tricks at all. Cano Cristales is in the northern part of Colombia, in “Sierra de la Macarena”.
The bed and rocks of this river are covered with mosses and algae which for much of the year appear as dull green and brown water plants. The water level regulates the among of sunlight reaching the plants. At certain times of the year depending on the water level the mosses ‘bloom’. Cano Cristales did not reach the 100 km of longitude and 20 meters of wide.

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Dance with a whale 3

 Dance with a whale

 Dance with a whale 1

 Dance with a whale 2

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