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Images tagged "one-animal"

With a focus on gilt-head sea bream and European sea bass, Greece is known worldwide for its extensive aquaculture and commercial fishing industries. The main fish auction in the port of Piraeus (the chief sea port of Athens) is the largest in Greece, processing and selling approximately 150 to 200 tonnes of fish daily, of which about 60 to 70 tonnes are from Greek fishing vessels operating in the local seas, about 20 to 30 tonnes are from Greek fish farms, and the remainder are imports.
Pangolins are largely covered in scales made of keratin-the same material found in human fingernails.
Aiw Wongla(left), 26, and her assistant Marlen Krieger(right), 24, make up the physiotherapy unit at the Soi Dog Foundation in Phuket, Thailand. Daily they train with dogs doing hydrotherapy, massage, acupuncture, and laser treatment. They both state that helping a dog walk again is the rewarding part of their job.
Pangolins are largely covered in scales made of keratin-the same material found in human fingernails. Pangolins are the most trafficked mammal in the world, and you’ve probably never heard of them. They are trafficked by the thousands for their scales, which are boiled off their bodies for use in traditional medicine; for their meat, which is a high-end delicacy in Vietnam and in China; and for their blood, which is considered to be a healing tonic. Vietnam, 2020. Kindred Guardians Project / We Animals Media
Phoenix, one of two calves rescued from the fires. Only Phoenix survived. Here she is being bottle fed by Edgar's Mission sanctuary founder Pam Ahern.
Cattle on dry, smokey landscapes in the Corryong area.
Koalas feel much more secure when they can hold on to something tightly. When koalas need to be examined at Southern Cross Wildlife Care, they give them a teddy bear to cling to. This koala was orphaned in the bushfires and is recovering from wounds.
A sub-adult wombat is treated for a brain injury and various wounds at Southern Cross Wildlife Care. He was most likely hurt when fleeing the fires.
Drowned body of a broiler chicken on a porch. USA, 2018. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
Volunteers console Flapjack, a donkey requiring evacuation.
A duck plays in the water covering what used to be a farmer's field in BC's Sumas Prairie after the area was flooded.
A cow being transported across Europe reaches for a tree branch while the truck is parked at the Bulgarian-Turkish border.
Burned koalas are darted with a sedative, then captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. They will later be released into a surviving forest.
A lone wallaby foraging for food in a burned forest outside Mallacoota.
An injured possum receives treatment at Southern Cross Wildlife Care for severe burns caused by the bushfires.
Drowned body of a broiler chicken in the flood water.
Cows grazing near Goose Lake in Vernon BC. Thick smoke from the White Rock Lake wildfire billows in the background.
A pig stands close to his rescuers within the active Caldor Fire zone, before they relocate him to safety.
One of many dead fish along this stretch of coast in the Gulf of Mexico.
Activist Elsie Herring, stands on the porch of her family home, holding a handkerchief over her mouth to filter out manure being sprayed on the field next door.
Cattle on dry, smokey landscapes in the Corryong area.
A sub-adult wombat is treated for a brain injury and various wounds at Southern Cross Wildlife Care. He was most likely hurt when fleeing the fires.
Koalas feel much more secure when they can hold on to something tightly. When koalas need to be examined at Southern Cross Wildlife Care, they give them a teddy bear to cling to. This koala was orphaned in the bushfires and is recovering from wounds.
An arborist helping with animal rescues with an injured koala.

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