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DUKAS_182802651_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: hairdresser's salon in Dimeka market. Tuesdays and Saturdays are market days in Dimeka, which is one of the most colorful markets in the area and is the "shopping mall' for many tribes, including Hamer, Benna and Karo. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802646_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 12, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: Karo boy with his face painted smiles along the Omo river bank. people from the Karo or Kara tribe in the local village Kolcho perched overlooking the Omo River. The Karo is the smallest tribal population in the region with an estimated population between 1.000 and 3.000. They are known to be the most decorative. They paint themselves with colored ochre, white chalk, yellow mineral rock or charcoal. As Hamer men, they Karo use clay to construct elaborate their unique headdresses. The Karo's practices i their lives are for self-pleasure and pride as also to atract the opposite sex. They use to cultivate crops as sorghum maize and beans. Recently, the tourism bought a lot of changes to the tribes, so, they use to beg, ask for some birr (local currency) when they get photographed, ask for an empty plastic bottle of water or for a T-shirts. Guns are used to protect cattle and to hant. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802642_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 12, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: people from the Karo or Kara tribe in the local village Kolcho perched overlooking the Omo River. The Karo is the smallest tribal population in the region with an estimated population between 1.000 and 3.000. They are known to be the most decorative. They paint themselves with colored ochre, white chalk, yellow mineral rock or charcoal. As Hamer men, they Karo use clay to construct elaborate their unique headdresses. The Karo's practices i their lives are for self-pleasure and pride as also to atract the opposite sex. They use to cultivate crops as sorghum maize and beans. Recently, the tourism bought a lot of changes to the tribes, so, they use to beg, ask for some birr (local currency) when they get photographed, ask for an empty plastic bottle of water or for a T-shirts. Guns are used to protect cattle and to hunt. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802636_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: a family of Hamer tribe return back to their village after work in the farms. The Hamer tribe is known to be one of the friendliest tribes in the Omo Valley. Their women are easily recognized by their hair, hung in ringlets formed with mud and butter. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802630_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: hairdresser's salon in Dimeka market. Tuesdays and Saturdays are market days in Dimeka, which is one of the most colorful markets in the area and is the "shopping mall' for many tribes, including Hamer, Benna and Karo. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802625_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: A woman from Hamer tribe sells local tobacco in Dimeka street market. Tuesdays and Saturdays are market days in Dimeka, which is one of the most colorful markets in the area and is the "shopping mall' for many tribes, including Hamer, Benna and Karo. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802623_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: A young shepherd dressed in traditional Hamer attire tends to her cows in her tribe's village. The Hamer tribe is known to be one of the friendliest tribes in the Omo Valley. Their women are easily recognized by their distinctive hair, styled in ringlets formed with mud and butter. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802621_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: woman from Hamar tribe has scars on her back, due to the "evangadi" traditional night dance where female relatives dance and invite whipping from men who have recently been initiated; this shows their support of the initiate, and their scars give them a say on who they marry.The Hamer tribe is known to be one of the friendliest tribes in the Omo Valley. Their women are easily recognized by their hair, hung in ringlets formed with mud and butter. (Maro Kouri / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802615_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: hairdresser's salon in Dimeka market. Tuesdays and Saturdays are market days in Dimeka, which is one of the most colorful markets in the area and is the "shopping mall' for many tribes, including Hamer, Benna and Karo. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802614_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 12, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: A Karo boy with body -painting stands on a tree, along the Omo riverbank. People from the Karo or Kara tribe in the local village Kolcho perched overlooking the Omo River. The Karo is the smallest tribal population in the region with an estimated population between 1.000 and 3.000. They are known to be the most decorative. They paint themselves with colored ochre, white chalk, yellow mineral rock or charcoal. As Hamer men, they Karo use clay to construct elaborate their unique headdresses. The Karo's practices i their lives are for self-pleasure and pride as also to atract the opposite sex. They use to cultivate crops as sorghum maize and beans. Recently, the tourism bought a lot of changes to the tribes, so, they use to beg, ask for some birr (local currency) when they get photographed, ask for an empty plastic bottle of water or for a T-shirts. Guns are used to protect cattle and to hant. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802613_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: in a local Hamer village. The Hamer tribe is known to be one of the friendliest tribes in the Omo Valley. Their women are easily recognized by their hair, hung in ringlets formed with mud and butter. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802611_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: hairdresser's salon in Dimeka market. Tuesdays and Saturdays are market days in Dimeka, which is one of the most colorful markets in the area and is the "shopping mall' for many tribes, including Hamer, Benna and Karo. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_182802607_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 11, 2019: Turmi, Omo Valley, southern Ethiopia, Africa: A young shepherd dressed in traditional Hamer attire tends to his goats in his tribe's village. The Hamer tribe is known to be one of the friendliest tribes in the Omo Valley. Their women are easily recognized by their distinctive hair, styled in ringlets formed with mud and butter. (Maro Kouri/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181387021_POL
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Circa 1975: Buffy Sainte-Marie (b. 1941 or 1942)Canadian Cree singer-songwriter. Her work focuses on issues of Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Her work has been covered by such musicians as Elvis Presley, Barbra Streisand, Neil Diamond, Neko Case, Janis Joplin, Chet Atkins, The Indigo Girls and Joe Cocker. (Sam Emerson/POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) -
DUKAS_180369623_EYE
'Rare and threatened': the bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
The bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
Royal Botanic Gardens scientists are heading to the Victorian national park in search of plant survivors amid the charred landscape.
Along with the state's environment department and local community groups, the RBGV is increasing its conservation efforts in the Grampians, known as Gariwerd to Indigenous peoples, after recent bushfires.
The sphaerolobium acanthos seedlings in the Royal Botanical Gardens Nursery that have been grown from rescued seed. The Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria are leading a rescue mission to to save rare plant species that it fears may have been wiped out in the recent Grampians fires. Melbourne, Australia. Picture : Penny Stephens. The Guardian Australia. Tuesday 21st January 2025
Penny Stephens / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Penny Stephens -
DUKAS_180369621_EYE
'Rare and threatened': the bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
The bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
Royal Botanic Gardens scientists are heading to the Victorian national park in search of plant survivors amid the charred landscape.
Along with the state's environment department and local community groups, the RBGV is increasing its conservation efforts in the Grampians, known as Gariwerd to Indigenous peoples, after recent bushfires.
Holden Sayers, Horticulturalist with the Royal Boatnic Gardens watering the sphaerolobium acanthos seedlings in the Royal Botanical Gardens Nursery that have been grown from rescued seed. The Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria are leading a rescue mission to to save rare plant species that it fears may have been wiped out in the recent Grampians fires. Melbourne, Australia. 21st January 2025
Penny Stephens / Guardian / 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)
Penny Stephens -
DUKAS_180369622_EYE
'Rare and threatened': the bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
The bid to save Grampian flowers after fire disasters.
Royal Botanic Gardens scientists are heading to the Victorian national park in search of plant survivors amid the charred landscape.
Along with the state's environment department and local community groups, the RBGV is increasing its conservation efforts in the Grampians, known as Gariwerd to Indigenous peoples, after recent bushfires.
Dr Andre Messina, Botanist and Dr Rebecca Miller Research Scientist ( Seed Science) with the Daviesia laevis Fabaceae in the Royal Botanical Gardens Nursery that has been grown from rescued seed. The Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria are leading a rescue mission to to save rare plant species that it fears may have been wiped out in the recent Grampians fires. Melbourne, Australia. 21st January 2025
Penny Stephens / Guardian / 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)
Penny Stephens -
DUKAS_158995851_EYE
‘It healed me’: the Indigenous forager reconnecting Native Americans with their roots.
Twila Cassadore hopes teaching Western Apache traditional foodways can aid mental, emotional and spiritual health. Twila Cassadore stands amongst some of her favorite prickly pear cacti that produce her favorite fruit in the San Carlos Apache Reservation in April.
© Gabriela Campos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_158995852_EYE
‘It healed me’: the Indigenous forager reconnecting Native Americans with their roots.
Twila Cassadore hopes teaching Western Apache traditional foodways can aid mental, emotional and spiritual health. Twila Cassadore gently collects the seeds from a dried chia flower on a foraging trip in the San Carlos Apache Reservation in April.
© Gabriela Campos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_158995850_EYE
‘It healed me’: the Indigenous forager reconnecting Native Americans with their roots.
Twila Cassadore hopes teaching Western Apache traditional foodways can aid mental, emotional and spiritual health. Twila Cassadore picks the petals off a flowering cactus during a foraging trip into the hills of the San Carlos Apache Reservation in April. Cassadore uses the petals in salads.
© Gabriela Campos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_158995849_EYE
‘It healed me’: the Indigenous forager reconnecting Native Americans with their roots.
Twila Cassadore hopes teaching Western Apache traditional foodways can aid mental, emotional and spiritual health. Twila Cassadore holds up a batch of wild pearl onions that she harvested in the San Carlos Apache Reservation in April.
© Gabriela Campos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_158995848_EYE
‘It healed me’: the Indigenous forager reconnecting Native Americans with their roots.
Twila Cassadore hopes teaching Western Apache traditional foodways can aid mental, emotional and spiritual health. Twila Cassadore gathers wild pearl onions on a foraging trip in the San Carlos Apache Reservation in April.
© Gabriela Campos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10150017_007
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194a)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, speaks on gun violence during a news conference in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_006
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194d)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, holds up a photo of one of the victims in the Uvalde school shooting during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_005
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194j)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, gestures during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_004
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194e)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, speaks during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_003
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194g)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, speaks during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_002
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194h)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, speaks during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10150017_001
PEOPLE - Matthew McConaughey, gebürtig aus Uvalde, Texas, spricht im Weissen Haus über Waffengewalt
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12976194i)
Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, speaks during a press conference on gun violence in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Press Briefing at the White House on Gun Violence, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 07 Jun 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_127722720_EYE
Rewilding Dunsany Castle.
Randal Plunkett in the grounds of Dunsany Castle, County Meath. ÔPeople think youÕre an idiotÕ: death metal Irish baron rewilds his estate. Trees, grasses and wildlife are returning as Lord Plunkett recreates a vanished landscape in County Meath. Lush, diverse vegetation has attracted butterflies and other insects.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_116599654_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902q)
Britain's Prince Charles, meets staff members during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599646_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902p)
Britain's Prince Charles, right, is introduced to Victoria, a Suffolk Punch horse by farmer and television personality Adam Henson, left, during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599056_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902e)
Britain's Prince Charles, right, is introduced to Victoria, a Suffolk Punch horse by farmer and television personality Adam Henson, left, during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599055_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902b)
Britain's Prince Charles, views a conservation area during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599054_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902o)
Britain's Prince Charles meets staff members during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599052_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902g)
Britain's Prince Charles, looks at a Gloucestershire Old Spot pig with her piglets during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599048_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902f)
Britain's Prince Charles, left, looks at a Gloucestershire Old Spot pig with her piglets during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599047_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902d)
Britain's Prince Charles, right, is introduced to Victoria, a Suffolk Punch horse by farmer and television personality Adam Henson, left, during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599040_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902h)
Britain's Prince Charles, looks at a Gloucestershire Old Spot pig with her piglets during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599028_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902c)
Britain's Prince Charles smiles as he views rare breeds, during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599027_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902a)
Britain's Prince Charles, right, is greeted by farmer and television personality Adam Henson during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow.
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599017_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902l)
Britain's Prince Charles mets Victoria, a Suffolk Punch horse during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599016_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902n)
Britain's Prince Charles, looks as a goat briefly gets its head stuck through a fence during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599015_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902i)
Britain's Prince Charles walks past Highland Cattle during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599002_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902k)
Britain's Prince Charles, looks at a Gloucestershire Old Spot pig with her piglets during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUKAS_116599000_REX
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo/Shutterstock (10697902j)
Britain's Prince Charles, looks at Gloucestershire Old Spot piglets during a visit to Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power near Cheltenham, England, Wednesday, July 1, 2020. The visit to Cotswold Farm Park highlights the important work that these farm parks do in preserving British native breeds, encouraging visitors to return to them when they re-open and go back regularly throughout the year to watch the animals change and grow
Prince Charles visit to Gloucestershire, UK - 01 Jul 2020 -
DUK10102305_053
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
Schemitzun
The 27th Annual Feast of Green Corn and Dance Powwow (Photo by Miro Vrlik / Pacific Press/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 23996432
(c) Dukas -
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FEATURE - Best of: Bilder des Wochenendes
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Slavek Ruta/REX/Shutterstock (9678176e)
A Snow leopard female called Jituse in her enclosure at the city zoo in Jihlava in the Czech Republic.
The snow leopard is a large cat native to the mountain ranges of Central and South Asia. It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List.
Snow leopard at Jihlava Zoo, Czech Republic - 17 May 2018
(c) Dukas -
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FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Slavek Ruta/REX/Shutterstock (9678176d)
A Snow leopard female called Jituse in her enclosure at the city zoo in Jihlava in the Czech Republic.
The snow leopard is a large cat native to the mountain ranges of Central and South Asia. It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List.
Snow leopard at Jihlava Zoo, Czech Republic - 17 May 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_156278272_EYE
'You're looking to die': the Brazil river where illegal fishing threatens lives
Poaching of endangered species flourishes despite widespread outcry - but sustainable fishing could end the violence engulfing the trade.
Jose Maria Batista Damasceno weeps as he describes his decades dodging death in the Brazilian Amazon.
There was the time, along the Japura River, that an illegal fisherman threatened to butcher him if he didn’t get out of town. "You’d better leave or we’ll harpoon you," Damasceno remembers being told.
A few years later he narrowly escaped being ambushed and murdered in another remote corner of the rainforest - just as Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips were last year.
Damasceno isn't an Indigenous activist or journalist, like Pereira and Phillips, whose killings exposed the environmental battle raging deep in South America's rainforests.
He is a fishing engineer who has dedicated his life to convincing small riverside communities that sustainable fishing programs will benefit them more than the quick, short-term profits offered by the illegal fishing mafias.
Pirarucu fish on sale in the Columbian market of Leticia.
© Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine
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