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Images tagged "standing"

Demonstrators with signs and banners.
Cattle on dry, smokey landscapes in the Corryong area.
Cows who survived the hurricane, stranded on a porch, surrounded by flood waters. USA, 2018. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
Wildland Firefighter crews work throughout the night as they backburn areas of the Caldor Fire to prevent further spread.
A member of a crew of investigators and filmmakers documents the animals and conditions inside a turkey factory farm. Canada, 2020. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
WildType founders Arye Elfenbein and Justin Kolbeck in their office and laboratory in San Francisco.
Cattle grazing in a dry and fire-scorched landscape near Corryong.
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.
Animals transported for slaughter from across Europe through the Bulgarian-Turkish border.
Cattle on dry, smokey landscapes in the Corryong area.
Cows who survived the hurricane, stranded on a porch, surrounded by flood waters.
Resident elephants at Elephant Freedom Village interact with the first international tourists from the UK to visit since the re-opening of Thailand in November 2021.
John Roberts, Director of Elephants & Conservation at the Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation, conducts one of his daily Lockdown Live Streams during the COVID-19 pandemic. Roberts has used these livestreams to maintain interest in and financial support for elephants and their mahouts.
An elephant is chained in a small corral without enough food or proper care. Thousands of elephants typically forced to work in the tourism industry in Thailand are now not working due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with their owners struggling to feed and maintain them.
Resident elephants at Elephant Freedom Village interact with the first international tourists from the UK to visit since the re-opening of Thailand in November 2021.
Elephant keeper Dodekho Saono, walks with 52-year-old Mae Beepoh as they they take their first international visitors in over a year for a walk through the Elephant Freedom Village community forest.
Papas Nukaew, a Karen elephant keeper, washes elephants with international tourists from the UK in the river that runs through the Elephant Freedom Village community forest.
Elephant keeper Dodekho Saono, walks with 52-year-old Mae Beepoh as they they take their first international visitors in over a year for a walk through the Elephant Freedom Village community forest.
The first international tourists from the UK to visit since the re-opening of Thailand in November 2021 wash elephants in the river that runs through the Elephant Freedom Village community forest.
Papas Nukaew, a Karen elephant keeper, washes elephants with international tourists from the UK in the river that runs through the Elephant Freedom Village community forest.
52-year-old Mae Beepoh eats grass from the community forest at Elephant Freedom Village in northern Thailand.As COVID devastated Thailand's tourist industry, thousands of elephants typically forced to work in the tourism industry in Thailand are now not working due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with their owners struggling to feed and maintain them. The EFV community forest model has emerged as a sustainable alternative for co-existence and is proving to be popular with international tourists who want to learn more about Karen elephant culture and experience elephants in their natural environment without the abuse and exploitation that often occurs at traditional tourist camps.
Teerapong Sakdamrongsri (Non Chai), the founder and owner of Elephant Freedom Village, plays with two-year-old Sierra.
Elephants enjoy swimming in the river at Elephant Freedom Village in northern Thailand.As COVID devastated Thailand's tourist industry, thousands of elephants typically forced to work in the tourism industry in Thailand are now not working due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with their owners struggling to feed and maintain them. The EFV community forest model has emerged as a sustainable alternative for co-existence and is proving to be popular with international tourists who want to learn more about Karen elephant culture and experience elephants in their natural environment without the abuse and exploitation that often occurs at traditional tourist camps.
At this farm, calves and young Holstein and Jersey cows who are slated for life in the dairy industry live indoors all winter, chained by their necks. Between the months of November to April or May, they are only able to stand up and lie down.

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