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  • FEATURE - Spanien: Der Fuengirola Tierpark in Malaga
    DUK10086944_012
    FEATURE - Spanien: Der Fuengirola Tierpark in Malaga
    February 26, 2018 - Malaga, Spain - Pinks flamingos (Phoenicopterus roseus) seen in their lagoon at Fuengirola Bioparc (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Spanien: Der Fuengirola Tierpark in Malaga
    DUK10086944_018
    FEATURE - Spanien: Der Fuengirola Tierpark in Malaga
    February 26, 2018 - Malaga, Spain - A pink flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) seen in its lagoon at Fuengirola Bioparc (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    DUKAS_46777938_REX
    Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Drew Buckley/REX (4384169o)
    Greater Flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) flies across other Flamingos
    Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    *Full story: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/pvfo
    They may look large and ungainly, not to mention almost prehistoric in appearance, but these Dalmatian pelicans show what a delicate touch they have as they come into land on water. Landscape and wildlife photographer Drew Buckley captured these enigmatic birds in action as they went about their daily lives on Lake Kerkini in northern Greece. While on a weekend trip with Natures Lens, Brit Drew's photos show the pelicans transforming from calm and serene - gliding above the mirror-like surface of the lake - to fast and frantic as a large group squabble over fish. Drew comments: "Lake Kerkini is the most important place in Europe for the globally threatened Dalmatian Pelican which, thankfully, can be observed here in great numbers during the winter months. "With mirror like reflections backed by high snowy peaks, Lake Kerkini is stunning place to be and a real paradise for bird watchers".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    DUKAS_46777936_REX
    Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Drew Buckley/REX (4384169n)
    Greater Flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) flies across Lake Kerkini
    Dalmatian pelicans on Lake Kerkini, Greece - 18 Jan 2015
    *Full story: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/pvfo
    They may look large and ungainly, not to mention almost prehistoric in appearance, but these Dalmatian pelicans show what a delicate touch they have as they come into land on water. Landscape and wildlife photographer Drew Buckley captured these enigmatic birds in action as they went about their daily lives on Lake Kerkini in northern Greece. While on a weekend trip with Natures Lens, Brit Drew's photos show the pelicans transforming from calm and serene - gliding above the mirror-like surface of the lake - to fast and frantic as a large group squabble over fish. Drew comments: "Lake Kerkini is the most important place in Europe for the globally threatened Dalmatian Pelican which, thankfully, can be observed here in great numbers during the winter months. "With mirror like reflections backed by high snowy peaks, Lake Kerkini is stunning place to be and a real paradise for bird watchers".
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Highlights 2012 - Unsere besten Tierfotos
    DUKAS_21797100_ACP
    Highlights 2012 - Unsere besten Tierfotos
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    Highlights 2012 - Unser besten Tierfotos

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    DUKAS_21797099_ACP
    Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    DUKAS_21797097_ACP
    Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    DUKAS_21797096_ACP
    Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    DUKAS_21797095_ACP
    Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    DUKAS_21797093_ACP
    Wie John_Downer anderthalbmillionen Flamingos von oben fotografiert
    Millionen Flamingos bei einer Rast
    270411

    [*** We all know how hard it is to take a photograph of a bird in the garden without it flying away. So how do you manage to film one and a half million flamingos without a single one of them batting an eyelid? Here's how, as will be shown in the second episode of the wildlife series Earthflight to be screened on BBC1. There has been an extra spy in the sky criss-crossing the globe over the past year. But there?s nothing sinister about it. The amazing unmanned Drone revealed here for the first time has been on a mission to film the earth from a bird?s-eye-view. And the result, as these images prove, is spectacular. The Drone is the latest high-tech device employed by the award-winning TV team who brought us wildlife series like Spy in the Den (lions), Spy in the Herd (elephants), Spy in the Jungle (tigers) and most recently Spy on the Ice (polar bears). Now they?ve taken to the air to allow viewers to soar like birds in the BBC1 series Earthflight. To do so, film-maker John Downer has filmed from helicopters, paragliders, microlights, model gyrocopters, gliders in the shape of vultures and even cameras carried on the backs of eagles as his team followed the migration routes of nature?s longest-distance travellers. But his latest gadget has captured some of the rarest shots because of its high-tech stealth and manoeuvrability. The quirky, secretive, silent Drone which will not be revcealed in the Earthflight series until the last episode is technically termed an octo-copter, a multi-rotored unmanned aerial vehicle with a camera mounted within the frame. It was built by Earthflight producer Philip Dalton who says: It took three months of late nights to assemble the components, which include a carbon fibre frame, GPS for navigation, gyros for stabilisation and a computerised flight control system. *** ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    DUK10005219_012
    FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock (5226649j)
    Flock of lesser flamingos (Phoenicopterus minor) in flight evading predator, Lake Nakuru, Kenya
    Flamingo hunters, Kenya
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/r8ub

    A photographer captured a series of images of two hyenas chasing flamingos in Lake Nakuru, Kenya.

    In the pictures, the hyenas can be seen stalking, and catching, their prey.

    Lake Nakuru is home to millions of flamingos, however in recent months the bird-population has sadly been under threat, due to contamintated water.

    The pictures, taken by British photographer Elliott Neep, were taken a few years ago and have captured the Lake at a time before the flamingos population was threatened.

    Photographer Elliott Neep, 41, said: "Just a few hundred metres away, I could see a pair of hyenas ambling towards us. They scampered about on the beach, chasing and tap-tackling. Was it a ploy? Did this behaviour lull the birds into a false sense of security? The hyenas continued to approach and subtly veered towards the water's edge.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    DUK10005219_010
    FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock (5226649i)
    Flock of lesser flamingos (Phoenicopterus minor) in flight evading predator, Lake Nakuru, Kenya
    Flamingo hunters, Kenya
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/r8ub

    A photographer captured a series of images of two hyenas chasing flamingos in Lake Nakuru, Kenya.

    In the pictures, the hyenas can be seen stalking, and catching, their prey.

    Lake Nakuru is home to millions of flamingos, however in recent months the bird-population has sadly been under threat, due to contamintated water.

    The pictures, taken by British photographer Elliott Neep, were taken a few years ago and have captured the Lake at a time before the flamingos population was threatened.

    Photographer Elliott Neep, 41, said: "Just a few hundred metres away, I could see a pair of hyenas ambling towards us. They scampered about on the beach, chasing and tap-tackling. Was it a ploy? Did this behaviour lull the birds into a false sense of security? The hyenas continued to approach and subtly veered towards the water's edge.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    DUK10005219_003
    FEATURE: Hyäne auf Flamingo-Jagd in Kenya
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Elliott Neep/REX Shutterstock (5226649f)
    Group of Lesser Flamingos treading water (Phoenicopterus minor), Lake Nakuru, Kenya
    Flamingo hunters, Kenya
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/r8ub

    A photographer captured a series of images of two hyenas chasing flamingos in Lake Nakuru, Kenya.

    In the pictures, the hyenas can be seen stalking, and catching, their prey.

    Lake Nakuru is home to millions of flamingos, however in recent months the bird-population has sadly been under threat, due to contamintated water.

    The pictures, taken by British photographer Elliott Neep, were taken a few years ago and have captured the Lake at a time before the flamingos population was threatened.

    Photographer Elliott Neep, 41, said: "Just a few hundred metres away, I could see a pair of hyenas ambling towards us. They scampered about on the beach, chasing and tap-tackling. Was it a ploy? Did this behaviour lull the birds into a false sense of security? The hyenas continued to approach and subtly veered towards the water's edge.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08690553_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841435a )
    Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber) foraging for small pink shrimp (Artemia salina) in saltwater lagoon near Punta Cormorant on Floreana Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. Pacific Ocean.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08690547_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841433a )
    Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber) foraging for small pink shrimp (Artemia salina) in saltwater lagoon near Punta Cormorant on Floreana Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. Pacific Ocean.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08690546_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841434a )
    Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber) foraging for small pink shrimp (Artemia salina) in saltwater lagoon near Punta Cormorant on Floreana Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. Pacific Ocean.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08690544_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841432a )
    Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber) foraging for small pink shrimp (Artemia salina) in saltwater lagoon near Punta Cormorant on Floreana Island in the Galapagos Island Archipeligo, Ecuador. Pacific Ocean.
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX