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Images tagged "hot"

Wildland Firefighter crews work throughout the night as they backburn areas of the Caldor Fire to prevent further spread.
Thousands of turkeys inside a factory farm. The heat causes them to pant. Canada, 2020. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
A pot of boiling water is filled with recently slaughtered ducks at a small slaughterhouse. Indonesia, 2021. Haig / Act for Farmed Animals / We Animals Media
A worker pulls a dead duck from a pot filled with boiling water at a slaughterhouse.  Indonesia, 2021. Haig / Act for Farmed Animals / We Animals Media
The blood of slaughtered ducks drips down a wall into a bowl at a small slaughtering shop at an Indonesian wet market. Indonesia, 2021. Haig / Act for Farmed Animals / We Animals Media
It is illegal for animals to be transported in heat over 30 degrees.
A hen stands with a gaping open mouth inside a battery cage as she pants in the summer heat on an Indian egg-production farm. Like all birds, hens do not sweat and must pant to cool down, and their open mouths are their natural response to feeling too warm. During the summer, the outside temperatures here routinely surpass 40°C.
As the outside temperature surpasses 40°C, hot afternoon sunshine spills through a section of broken roof, directly spotlighting a group of egg-laying hens confined inside battery cages.
Chicks lie flat on the dirt floor of a shed on an Indian egg production farm, attempting to cool themselves in the hot summer weather. Soon after birth, the ends of the chicks' beaks had been clipped and blunted so that when, as adults, they are housed in battery cages, they do not injure each other inside the cramped confines of the cages.
Five to six egg-laying hens with pale and drooping combs, dirty feathers and patches of bare skin are kept in small battery cages of about three by two feet on an intensive egg-production farm even as the outside temperatures reach 42°C (107°F).
Volunteers with the Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos use hair dryers to warm a hypothermic chicken that was rescued and brought to triage. USA, 2022. Victoria de Martigny / We Animals Media

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