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Images tagged "rescue"

Pikin and Appolinaire. Pikin was being transported from the vet clinic to the new gorilla enclosure, but woke up early from the sedation. Cameroon, 2009.
Jan with a rescued horse at Catskill Sanctuary. USA, 2016.
Cora Bailey rescuing a sick piglet at the Randfontein Dump. South Africa, 2016.
Sneha's Care founder Sneha Shrestha. Nepal, 2017.
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.
Ruby and Phoenix with Edgar's Mission sanctuary founder Pam Ahern. Phoenix was rescued from the Australian bushfires.
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.
Summer, the rescued sheep, at Farm Sanctuary. USA, 2015.
Activists leave a farm with three rescued pigs at 3am. Australia, 2013.
Activists reflected in water at duck hunting. Australia, 2017.
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
A portrait of pangolin caretaker Dinh Van Tham, 61, in the pangolin quarantine area of the rehabilitation center. Vietnam, 2020. Kindred Guardians Project / We Animals Media
Louise Bonomi with a joey who was injured by the bushfires. Curious horses in the pasture came over to investigate. Australia, 2020. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
Animal Control crews rescue dozens of chickens from Caldor Fire evacuated areas .
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.
Veterinarian Chris Barton of Vets for Compassion carries eucalyptus browse into a destroyed eucalyptus tree plantation where surviving koalas perch high in trees. The fresh eucalyptus is tied to the base of trees which lures them down, at which point the rescuers and vets can catch the koala and assess them for injuries. If the animals are kept for rehabilitation, they will later be released to the wild.
A pig stands close to his rescuers within the active Caldor Fire zone, before they relocate him to safety.
An arborist helping with animal rescues with an injured koala.
A dying calf at a dairy farm in Vermont.
A newborn calf, born of a dairy cow, is isolated in a pen away from his mother. At this farm, unwanted males as well as mixed-breed females are shot.
A new born calf is rescued from a dairy farm by activist Jason Bolalek. Here, she lies in some straw in the back of Bolalek's truck. She will be transported to veterinary care at Cornell University and then to her new home at Mockingbird Farm Sanctuary.
Activist Jason Bolalek rescues a young calf from a dairy farm. She was brought to Cornell University for veterinary care and adopted by Mockingbird Farm Sanctuary.

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