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  • PEOPLE - Gene Hackman gestorben (Archiv)
    DUK10162643_072
    PEOPLE - Gene Hackman gestorben (Archiv)
    Editorial use only. No book cover usage.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock (5863029b)
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman - 1969
    Paramount
    Portrait
    Downhill Racer

    (c) Dukas

     

  • STOCK
    DUKAS_21598167_REX
    STOCK
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Gerard Lacz / Rex Features (1506296a)
    YELLOW-SPOTTED RIVER TURTLE podocnemis unifilis, MADRE DE DIOS RIVER IN MANU NATIONAL PARK, PERU
    STOCK

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_21592853_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features (842583a)
    Green sea turtle, Chelonia mydas, gets cleaned by yellow tangs, Zebrasoma flavescens and lined bristletooth, Ctenochaetus striatus, Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, (N. Pacific)
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    DUKAS_56811006_PSO
    Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    GREEN TURTLE Chelonius mydas female in morning light after laying eggs on beach Ascension Island.

    The British government and conservation groups have announced the creation of a marine wildlife reserve almost the size of the UK near the tiny Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The island, which is a British Overseas Territory with a population of around 900, is surrounded by ocean teeming with wildlife - as the BBC reports, the new reserve is home to some of the world's largest marlin, as well as one of the biggest populations of green turtles and a host of tropical bird colonies.

    The introduction of the new reserve will mean around 2 per cent of the world's oceans will be covered by conservation zones - that's a long way from the 20 to 30 per ent recommended by scientists in the 2003 Durban Action Plan, but it's a large increase compared to just a few years ago.

    The total area of the reserve is around 90,460 square miles - slightly less than that of the UK, which is around 94,000 square miles. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT

     

  • Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    DUKAS_56811009_PSO
    Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    GREEN TURTLE Chelonius mydas female in morning light Ascension Island Atlantic Ocean.

    The British government and conservation groups have announced the creation of a marine wildlife reserve almost the size of the UK near the tiny Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The island, which is a British Overseas Territory with a population of around 900, is surrounded by ocean teeming with wildlife - as the BBC reports, the new reserve is home to some of the world's largest marlin, as well as one of the biggest populations of green turtles and a host of tropical bird colonies.

    The introduction of the new reserve will mean around 2 per cent of the world's oceans will be covered by conservation zones - that's a long way from the 20 to 30 per ent recommended by scientists in the 2003 Durban Action Plan, but it's a large increase compared to just a few years ago.

    The total area of the reserve is around 90,460 square miles - slightly less than that of the UK, which is around 94,000 square miles. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT

     

  • Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    DUKAS_56811017_PSO
    Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    GREEN TURTLE Chelonius mydas female in morning light heading back to sea after laying eggs Ascension Island Atlantic Ocean.

    The British government and conservation groups have announced the creation of a marine wildlife reserve almost the size of the UK near the tiny Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The island, which is a British Overseas Territory with a population of around 900, is surrounded by ocean teeming with wildlife - as the BBC reports, the new reserve is home to some of the world's largest marlin, as well as one of the biggest populations of green turtles and a host of tropical bird colonies.

    The introduction of the new reserve will mean around 2 per cent of the world's oceans will be covered by conservation zones - that's a long way from the 20 to 30 per ent recommended by scientists in the 2003 Durban Action Plan, but it's a large increase compared to just a few years ago.

    The total area of the reserve is around 90,460 square miles - slightly less than that of the UK, which is around 94,000 square miles. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT

     

  • Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    DUKAS_56811027_PSO
    Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    GREEN TURTLE Chelonius mydas female in morning light after laying eggs on beach Ascension Island.

    The British government and conservation groups have announced the creation of a marine wildlife reserve almost the size of the UK near the tiny Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The island, which is a British Overseas Territory with a population of around 900, is surrounded by ocean teeming with wildlife - as the BBC reports, the new reserve is home to some of the world's largest marlin, as well as one of the biggest populations of green turtles and a host of tropical bird colonies.

    The introduction of the new reserve will mean around 2 per cent of the world's oceans will be covered by conservation zones - that's a long way from the 20 to 30 per ent recommended by scientists in the 2003 Durban Action Plan, but it's a large increase compared to just a few years ago.

    The total area of the reserve is around 90,460 square miles - slightly less than that of the UK, which is around 94,000 square miles. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT

     

  • Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    DUKAS_56811030_PSO
    Government Creates Ascension Island Marine Reserve
    GREEN TURTLE female head detail Chelonius mydas Ascension Island

    The British government and conservation groups have announced the creation of a marine wildlife reserve almost the size of the UK near the tiny Ascension Island in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The island, which is a British Overseas Territory with a population of around 900, is surrounded by ocean teeming with wildlife - as the BBC reports, the new reserve is home to some of the world's largest marlin, as well as one of the biggest populations of green turtles and a host of tropical bird colonies.

    The introduction of the new reserve will mean around 2 per cent of the world's oceans will be covered by conservation zones - that's a long way from the 20 to 30 per ent recommended by scientists in the 2003 Durban Action Plan, but it's a large increase compared to just a few years ago.

    The total area of the reserve is around 90,460 square miles - slightly less than that of the UK, which is around 94,000 square miles. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT

     

  • BOY RIDING AND FEEDING A GIANT TURTLE, FREGATE ISLAND, SEYCHELLES
    DUKAS_07306754_FRI
    BOY RIDING AND FEEDING A GIANT TURTLE, FREGATE ISLAND, SEYCHELLES
    Young boy on an isolated island playing with a giant turtle. He his holding her favorite food in front of her head. She wants to reach it by walking and never reaches it. The boy is racing the island in a very slow pace. Millions of years of total isolation have led to the development of animals and plants which exist only on the Seychelles. It became undisturbed by human civilization in a warm and tropical environment.
    Originally this giant tortoise, Testudo gigantea, inhabited all the granite islands, but seafarers and early settlers rendered it almost extinct. The huge reptiles were reintroduced on Curieuse island, from Aldabra.
    Fregate is a small luxury hotel, 50 km east of Mah?; 16 bungalows, seven beaches, a small airport and helicopter service. ItÕs one of the most expensive hotels.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • HOTEL AND BIRD SANCTUARY ON BIRD ISLAND, SEYCHELLES
    DUKAS_07306791_FRI
    HOTEL AND BIRD SANCTUARY ON BIRD ISLAND, SEYCHELLES
    The Bird Island Lodge offers 24 beach front bungalows. The visitors can watch millions of seabirds nesting and breeding from close range. Another inhabitant of Bird Island is Esmeralda believed to be the world's oldest and heaviest land tortoise. Bird Island is situated 96 km north of Mahé, a flat coral island. It¹s the home of several million seabirds. The largest colony are the Fairy terns. They stay six months, from May to October, nesting and breeding. Than they disappear and nobody knows where they stay during the next six months.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • MTV's 'Total Request Live' TV Show, New York, America - 08 Oct 2007
    DUKAS_15757415_REX
    MTV's 'Total Request Live' TV Show, New York, America - 08 Oct 2007
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Charles Sykes / Rex Features ( 699601b )
    Jennifer Lopez
    MTV's 'Total Request Live' TV Show, New York, America - 08 Oct 2007

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • USA Obama New Hampshire Primary Speech
    DUKAS_4779938_WPN
    USA Obama New Hampshire Primary Speech
    Presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., with his wife Michelle Obama, greets supporters after being defeated by Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, at Nashua High School in Nashua, N.H. on Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08714561_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841814a )
    Green sea turtle, Chelonia mydas, Sueste Bay, Fernando de Noronha, Pernambuco, Brazil, Atlantic Ocean
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Marine Wildlife
    DUKAS_40602789_REX
    Marine Wildlife
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale/SplashdownDirect/REX (746727a)
    Giant amazon river turtle, Podocnemis expansa, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil
    Marine Wildlife

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617741_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617742_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617745_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617746_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617747_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    DUKAS_07617748_FRI
    CAYMAN TURTLE FARM, GREEN TURTLE, GREEN SEA TURTLE, WEST BAY, GRAND CAYMAN
    The Cayman Turtle Farm breeds green sea-turtles to supply local demand for meat and to conserve the species. Every year, hundreds are released into the wild. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • TURTLE, AQUARIUM, CAPITAL NASSAU, BAHAMAS
    DUKAS_07617708_FRI
    TURTLE, AQUARIUM, CAPITAL NASSAU, BAHAMAS
    Captured tortoise in the aquarium of Nassau, Bahamas. A protective scheme, the concern of the tourists, helping to secure the animals in the wild.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • ROYALS: Queen SOFIA of Spain exploring Greece on a donkey
    DUKAS_6051926_MWP
    ROYALS: Queen SOFIA of Spain exploring Greece on a donkey
    **FR ES IT out** / Island de Rhodes, 2008-5-17 / Queen SOFIA of Spain exploring Greece on a donkey. During her trip Queen Sofia was seen taking pictures of a giant turtle and relaxed on a yacht. (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08714406_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841039a )
    Captive Galapagos giant tortoise (Geochelone elephantopus) being fed at the Charles Darwin Research Station on Santa Cruz Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. The Galapagos Giant Tortoise is endemic only to the Galapagos Islands. There are currently 11 survivng races and 3 extinct races.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08714407_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841040a )
    Captive Galapagos giant tortoise (Geochelone elephantopus) being fed at the Charles Darwin Research Station on Santa Cruz Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. The Galapagos Giant Tortoise is endemic only to the Galapagos Islands. There are currently 11 survivng races and 3 extinct races.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India  - 2008
    DUKAS_08566264_REX
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    words being written
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features ( 840437a )
    A turtle is unloaded from a fishing boat and pulled along the beach
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    THE PLIGHT OF INDIA'S TURTLES

    The Indian woman meticulously cuts off the bottom half of the upturned turtle with her large knife, occasionally stopping to sharpen the blade on the stone floor.

    The creature is still alive and flapping its fins wildly and helplessly.

    To many Western-holidaymakers' eyes this may seem a gruesome sight - but this is way things are done in the fishing village of Vizhinjam in Kerala, South West India.

    Men in the village traditionally go to sea in the fishing boats while the women buy their catches and are responsible for cutting up the catch and selling them on to restaurants.

    However, turtles are listed as a threatened species and should not be caught and killed like regular fish; due to this there is no real market for turtle flesh.

    Despite this, whether by accident or design, as these pictures show, turtle is still on the menu for many in Vizhinjam.

    According to turtle campaigners part of the reason for the continued capture and killing of turtles is the lack of awareness of their status.

    They say that if more effort was made to teach the fishermen about endangered status of the species then they could be relied upon to release the trapped ones back into the sea.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHQVONNUK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India  - 2008
    DUKAS_08566268_REX
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    words being written
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features ( 840437b )
    A turtle is unloaded from a fishing boat and pulled along the beach
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    THE PLIGHT OF INDIA'S TURTLES

    The Indian woman meticulously cuts off the bottom half of the upturned turtle with her large knife, occasionally stopping to sharpen the blade on the stone floor.

    The creature is still alive and flapping its fins wildly and helplessly.

    To many Western-holidaymakers' eyes this may seem a gruesome sight - but this is way things are done in the fishing village of Vizhinjam in Kerala, South West India.

    Men in the village traditionally go to sea in the fishing boats while the women buy their catches and are responsible for cutting up the catch and selling them on to restaurants.

    However, turtles are listed as a threatened species and should not be caught and killed like regular fish; due to this there is no real market for turtle flesh.

    Despite this, whether by accident or design, as these pictures show, turtle is still on the menu for many in Vizhinjam.

    According to turtle campaigners part of the reason for the continued capture and killing of turtles is the lack of awareness of their status.

    They say that if more effort was made to teach the fishermen about endangered status of the species then they could be relied upon to release the trapped ones back into the sea.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHQVONNUK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India  - 2008
    DUKAS_08566273_REX
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    words being written
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features ( 840437d )
    A woman cuts up a turtle on the beach
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    THE PLIGHT OF INDIA'S TURTLES

    The Indian woman meticulously cuts off the bottom half of the upturned turtle with her large knife, occasionally stopping to sharpen the blade on the stone floor.

    The creature is still alive and flapping its fins wildly and helplessly.

    To many Western-holidaymakers' eyes this may seem a gruesome sight - but this is way things are done in the fishing village of Vizhinjam in Kerala, South West India.

    Men in the village traditionally go to sea in the fishing boats while the women buy their catches and are responsible for cutting up the catch and selling them on to restaurants.

    However, turtles are listed as a threatened species and should not be caught and killed like regular fish; due to this there is no real market for turtle flesh.

    Despite this, whether by accident or design, as these pictures show, turtle is still on the menu for many in Vizhinjam.

    According to turtle campaigners part of the reason for the continued capture and killing of turtles is the lack of awareness of their status.

    They say that if more effort was made to teach the fishermen about endangered status of the species then they could be relied upon to release the trapped ones back into the sea.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHQVONNUK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India  - 2008
    DUKAS_08566275_REX
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    words being written
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features ( 840437e )
    A woman cuts up a turtle on the beach
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    THE PLIGHT OF INDIA'S TURTLES

    The Indian woman meticulously cuts off the bottom half of the upturned turtle with her large knife, occasionally stopping to sharpen the blade on the stone floor.

    The creature is still alive and flapping its fins wildly and helplessly.

    To many Western-holidaymakers' eyes this may seem a gruesome sight - but this is way things are done in the fishing village of Vizhinjam in Kerala, South West India.

    Men in the village traditionally go to sea in the fishing boats while the women buy their catches and are responsible for cutting up the catch and selling them on to restaurants.

    However, turtles are listed as a threatened species and should not be caught and killed like regular fish; due to this there is no real market for turtle flesh.

    Despite this, whether by accident or design, as these pictures show, turtle is still on the menu for many in Vizhinjam.

    According to turtle campaigners part of the reason for the continued capture and killing of turtles is the lack of awareness of their status.

    They say that if more effort was made to teach the fishermen about endangered status of the species then they could be relied upon to release the trapped ones back into the sea.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHQVONNUK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India  - 2008
    DUKAS_08566277_REX
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    words being written
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features ( 840437f )
    A woman cuts up a turtle on the beach
    Turtles being slaughtered on the beach, Vizhinjam, Kerala, India - 2008
    THE PLIGHT OF INDIA'S TURTLES

    The Indian woman meticulously cuts off the bottom half of the upturned turtle with her large knife, occasionally stopping to sharpen the blade on the stone floor.

    The creature is still alive and flapping its fins wildly and helplessly.

    To many Western-holidaymakers' eyes this may seem a gruesome sight - but this is way things are done in the fishing village of Vizhinjam in Kerala, South West India.

    Men in the village traditionally go to sea in the fishing boats while the women buy their catches and are responsible for cutting up the catch and selling them on to restaurants.

    However, turtles are listed as a threatened species and should not be caught and killed like regular fish; due to this there is no real market for turtle flesh.

    Despite this, whether by accident or design, as these pictures show, turtle is still on the menu for many in Vizhinjam.

    According to turtle campaigners part of the reason for the continued capture and killing of turtles is the lack of awareness of their status.

    They say that if more effort was made to teach the fishermen about endangered status of the species then they could be relied upon to release the trapped ones back into the sea.

    MUST CREDIT PHOTOS BY: Peter Ekin-Wood / Rex Features

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHQVONNUK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08627985_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841844a )
    Green sea turtle, Chelonia mydas, Hanauma Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, (Pacific) (rr)
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08702432_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841833a )
    Green sea turtles, Chelonia mydas, resting on shore, Black Sand Beach, Big Island, Hawaii, USA
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • (1)CHINA-QINGDAO-TURTLE(CN)
    DUKAS_10038237_EYE
    (1)CHINA-QINGDAO-TURTLE(CN)
    (090527) -- QINGDAO, May 27, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Tourists play with turtle at the "Turtle Bay" in the submarine world of Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, May 27, 2009. (Xinhua/Li Ziheng) (yc)
    Xinhua News Agency / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    DUKAS/EYEVINE

     

  • (2)CHINA-QINGDAO-TURTLE(CN)
    DUKAS_10038240_EYE
    (2)CHINA-QINGDAO-TURTLE(CN)
    (090527) -- QINGDAO, May 27, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Tourists play with turtle at the "Turtle Bay" in the submarine world of Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, May 27, 2009. (Xinhua/Li Ziheng) (yc)
    Xinhua News Agency / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    DUKAS/EYEVINE

     

  • dukas 08728281 afr
    DUKAS_08728281_AFR
    dukas 08728281 afr
    Marsh (Helmeted) Terrapin, Pelomedusa subrufa, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, Kalahari, South Africa (FOTO: DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET)
    DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET

     

  • LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    DUKAS_10803023_MWP
    LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    Beverly Hills, 2009-8-03 / LA TOYA JACKSON, sister of the late Michael Jackson, spotted arriving with her friend Ja-Tail company founder JEFFRE PHILLIPS for dinner at the celebrity hotspot 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills, CA. Pale looking LA TOYA appeared in a golden knotted button down shirt, light blue distressed jeans, with rhinestones embellished pink belt, turtle print handbag and leopard print high heels. Fashionable or fashion-desaster? © Copyright 2009, Most Wanted Pictures, Inc. | Tarzana | CA 91356 | USA | photo@mostwantedpictures.net (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    DUKAS_10803027_MWP
    LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    Beverly Hills, 2009-8-03 / LA TOYA JACKSON, sister of the late Michael Jackson, spotted arriving with her friend Ja-Tail company founder JEFFRE PHILLIPS for dinner at the celebrity hotspot 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills, CA. Pale looking LA TOYA appeared in a golden knotted button down shirt, light blue distressed jeans, with rhinestones embellished pink belt, turtle print handbag and leopard print high heels. Fashionable or fashion-desaster? © Copyright 2009, Most Wanted Pictures, Inc. | Tarzana | CA 91356 | USA | photo@mostwantedpictures.net (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    DUKAS_10803028_MWP
    LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    Beverly Hills, 2009-8-03 / LA TOYA JACKSON, sister of the late Michael Jackson, spotted arriving with her friend Ja-Tail company founder JEFFRE PHILLIPS for dinner at the celebrity hotspot 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills, CA. Pale looking LA TOYA appeared in a golden knotted button down shirt, light blue distressed jeans, with rhinestones embellished pink belt, turtle print handbag and leopard print high heels. Fashionable or fashion-desaster? © Copyright 2009, Most Wanted Pictures, Inc. | Tarzana | CA 91356 | USA | photo@mostwantedpictures.net (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    DUKAS_10803031_MWP
    LA TOYA JACKSON appears in a fasion-desaster outfit for dinner at 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills
    Beverly Hills, 2009-8-03 / LA TOYA JACKSON, sister of the late Michael Jackson, spotted arriving with her friend Ja-Tail company founder JEFFRE PHILLIPS for dinner at the celebrity hotspot 'Mr. Chow' in Beverly Hills, CA. Pale looking LA TOYA appeared in a golden knotted button down shirt, light blue distressed jeans, with rhinestones embellished pink belt, turtle print handbag and leopard print high heels. Fashionable or fashion-desaster? © Copyright 2009, Most Wanted Pictures, Inc. | Tarzana | CA 91356 | USA | photo@mostwantedpictures.net (FOTO:DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICS)
    DUKAS/MOST WANTED PICTURES

     

  • VARIOUS
    DUKAS_12526598_REX
    VARIOUS
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andre Seale / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048285a )
    Green sea turtle, Chelonia mydas, Fernando de Noronha, Brazil
    VARIOUS

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Debbie Does Cakes realistic cakes, San Francisco, America - Mar 2010
    DUKAS_13403733_REX
    Debbie Does Cakes realistic cakes, San Francisco, America - Mar 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Debbie Goard / Rex Features ( 1141681h )
    Turtle cake
    Believe It or Not, These Are CAKES!
    BELIEVE IT OR NOT, THESE ARE CAKES!

    Anyone looking to enjoy a savoury bite of these meals may get a surprise - they are ultra-realistic cakes!

    And these doggies look cute enough to take a bite out of, which is lucky as they are also the creation of baking-genius Debbie Goard.

    The 41-year-old has spent two decades creating sensational sweet treats based on animals and real-life objects.

    She can create edible art works in the form of almost anything her customers ask for.

    Her San Francisco-based Debbie Does Cakes company is so good she says "my cakes often get mistaken for real objects, most notably, the life-sized Chihuahua cake that compelled restaurant patrons to exclaim 'why is there a dog on the table?!'"

    Highlights of her creature cakes, which start from $200, include a giraffe, a warthog and a scary scorpion - the latter commission for a five-year-old's birthday.

    While onlookers will get a surprise when you tuck into a tasty cake made to look like a camera, a Blackberry or even a pair of sneakers.

    Debbie explains: "By drawing on influences of pop culture, fashion and art I strive to make edible objects d'art to be admired and devoured."


    MUST CREDIT PICTURES BY
    Debbie Goard/Rex Features
    Story by Dean Murray

    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EKARNJLIK (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529328_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024a )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529330_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024c )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529337_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024h )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529341_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024j )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529342_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024i )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14529343_REX
    Chinese soft-shelled albino turtles adopted by Blue Reef Aquarium, Portsmouth, Britain - 10 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Solent News / Rex Features ( 1195024f )
    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks. A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her. Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium, in Portsmouth, Hants, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.
    The four turtles have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use like a snorkel.
    Pictured today
    Turtley Ugly
    TURTLEY UGLY

    These freaky albino turtles have been adopted by an aquarium whose shell-shocked staff took pity on their ugly looks.

    A student asked the aquarium to home the Chinese soft-shelled turtles when she left university because she was unable to take them with her.

    Staff at the Blue Reef Aquarium in Portsmouth, Hampshire, were taken by the creatures' rare orange colour and croissant-like look.

    The four turtles, which are usually a brownish-green, have an extremely long neck and tube-like nostrils which they use as a snorkel.

    They are a delicacy in Asia, where they are used as a prized ingredient in turtle soup and traditional medicine.

    The former pets are now in quarantine but will join a shoal of giant carp in an open-top freshwater display.

    They are thought to be about three or four years old. The smallest has a shell that is just a few inches long, while the biggest is six inches.

    Lindsay Holloway, general manager at Blue Reef, said: "An albino soft-shell turtle is very rare.

    "Their light colouring would make them extremely vulnerable in the wild because they would stand out and be an easy target for predators.

    "People think they are very ugly but I think they are adorable, especially the expression on their faces when they extend their neck.

    "The fact that these...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EXYESOHNW

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14611461_REX
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 1198003k )
    Birthday celebration for Boris the turtle
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mayor Boris Johnson celebrates his birthday this weekend, and to mark the occasion, an aquatic butler (Gareth Calvert) dived into the massive Ocean Display at the Sea Life London Aquarium to deliver a very special underwater cake to his namesake, Boris, the massive 12 stone rare green turtle. Dressed in full uniform, Boris' butler swam through shoals of colourful fish to deliver a spectacularly visual specially created marine cake made from all of Boris (the turtle's!) favourite things:- layers of carrots, broccoli, sprouts and leafy samphire all set in one hundred layers of organically coloured gelatin. The amazing underwater creation is the handiwork of food artist and concept chef, Caroline Hobkinson.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14611462_REX
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 1198003l )
    Birthday celebration for Boris the turtle
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mayor Boris Johnson celebrates his birthday this weekend, and to mark the occasion, an aquatic butler (Gareth Calvert) dived into the massive Ocean Display at the Sea Life London Aquarium to deliver a very special underwater cake to his namesake, Boris, the massive 12 stone rare green turtle. Dressed in full uniform, Boris' butler swam through shoals of colourful fish to deliver a spectacularly visual specially created marine cake made from all of Boris (the turtle's!) favourite things:- layers of carrots, broccoli, sprouts and leafy samphire all set in one hundred layers of organically coloured gelatin. The amazing underwater creation is the handiwork of food artist and concept chef, Caroline Hobkinson.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14611476_REX
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 1198003n )
    Birthday celebration for Boris the turtle
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mayor Boris Johnson celebrates his birthday this weekend, and to mark the occasion, an aquatic butler (Gareth Calvert) dived into the massive Ocean Display at the Sea Life London Aquarium to deliver a very special underwater cake to his namesake, Boris, the massive 12 stone rare green turtle. Dressed in full uniform, Boris' butler swam through shoals of colourful fish to deliver a spectacularly visual specially created marine cake made from all of Boris (the turtle's!) favourite things:- layers of carrots, broccoli, sprouts and leafy samphire all set in one hundred layers of organically coloured gelatin. The amazing underwater creation is the handiwork of food artist and concept chef, Caroline Hobkinson.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14611946_REX
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 1198003h )
    Birthday celebration for Boris the turtle
    Underwater birthday celebration for Boris the Green Turtle, Sea Life London Aquarium, London, Britain - 17 Jun 2010
    Mayor Boris Johnson celebrates his birthday this weekend, and to mark the occasion, an aquatic butler (Gareth Calvert) dived into the massive Ocean Display at the Sea Life London Aquarium to deliver a very special underwater cake to his namesake, Boris, the massive 12 stone rare green turtle. Dressed in full uniform, Boris' butler swam through shoals of colourful fish to deliver a spectacularly visual specially created marine cake made from all of Boris (the turtle's!) favourite things:- layers of carrots, broccoli, sprouts and leafy samphire all set in one hundred layers of organically coloured gelatin. The amazing underwater creation is the handiwork of food artist and concept chef, Caroline Hobkinson.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

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