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  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0045.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0812.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0819.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0552.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0551.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0550.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0426.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0424.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0415.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0311.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0145.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0038.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0117.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0800.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0809.jpg
  • Landscapes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tazania, Africa. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    A14I0812-2.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2307.tif
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5089.tif
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2308_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5095_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5074_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5027_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5058_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2341_1.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5021.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A5016.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2339.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2332.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2315.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2309.jpg
  • An activist holds an elephant tusk in front of a pile of burnt tusks in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4928_1.jpg
  • A guard with burnt tusks. More than 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns were destroyed in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4949.jpg
  • A guard stands by the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4434.jpg
  • Elephant tusks and Rhino horns waiting to be destroyed in Kenya. More than 100 tonnes of ivory was burned. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G1902.jpg
  • Rothschild Giraffe, Kenya. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G5958.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2292.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2301.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2110.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A4612.jpg
  • A guard stands by the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4387_1.jpg
  • Guard stands by the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4400_1.jpg
  • Ivory ornaments and elephant tusks await destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4975_1.jpg
  • An activist holds an elephant tusk in front of a pile of burnt tusks in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4921.jpg
  • Piles of elephant tusks burning. More that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns were destroyed in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4835.jpg
  • Ivory ornaments and elephant tusks await destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4898.jpg
  • Burnt ivory ornaments and elephant tusks in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4914.jpg
  • Piles of elephant tusks burning. More that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns were destroyed in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4787.jpg
  • Piles of elephant tusks burning. More that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns were destroyed in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4821.jpg
  • An activist holds a rhino horn in front of a pile of tusks awaiting destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4559.jpg
  • A pile of tusks awaiting destruction in Kenya. The tusks - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4520.jpg
  • An activist holds a rhino horn in front of a pile of tusks awaiting destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4556.jpg
  • People view the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4415.jpg
  • Elephant tusks await the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4393.jpg
  • The burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2276.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2234.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2149.jpg
  • Rothschild Giraffe, Kenya. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G5961.jpg
  • A orphaned elephant, drinks from a bottle at the   David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Nursery bordering Nairobi National Park, The Trust offers safe haven to orphaned baby elephants rescued from parks and reserves in Kenya. The nursery cares for the young elephants, including hand rearing them until they are old enough to be gradually introduced back to the wild in Tsavo East National Park. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2314.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    AT0G2084.jpg
  • A guard stands by piles of tusks at the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4498_1.jpg
  • Guards in a truck full of elephant tusks awaiting destruction in Kenya. The tusks - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4590_1.jpg
  • Ivory ornaments and elephant tusks await destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4438_1.jpg
  • A guard stands by the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2262_1.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2187_1.jpg
  • A guard stands by piles of tusks at the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4721.jpg
  • An activist holds #worthmorealive sign in front of a pile of tusks awaiting destruction in Kenya. The tusks - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4507.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2144.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    AT0G2083.jpg
  • Burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    MR7A4822.jpg
  • Piles of elephant tusks burning. More that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns were destroyed in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4806_1.jpg
  • Ivory ornaments and elephant tusks await destruction in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4976.jpg
  • A guard stands by the burning of more that 100 tonnes of Elephant tusks and Rhino horns in Kenya. The tusks alone - from about 8,000 elephants - would be worth more than $105 million on the black market. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory. Photo: Paul Hilton
    MR7A4398.jpg
  • Skipjack tuna swim just below the surface off the Maldives. The Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior is on an expedition in the Indian Ocean to expose overfishing and to highlight the problems associated with excessive tuna fishing, unsustainable or illegal fishing practices, the lack of law enforcement, and the need for countries to cooperate and ensure that communities benefit from the wealth of their oceans in future. The Rainbow Warrior and her crew have already visited South Africa, Mozambique, Mauritius and now the Maldives, known for its sustainable pole and line tuna fishing method. Photo: Paul Hilton / Greenpeace
    GOPR1391.jpg
  • Rangers from Uganda Conservation Foundation and the Uganda Wildlife Authority stand on top of a mountain of snares and traps. The thousands of snares weighing over 12 tons and have been collected over a 12 month period in Murchasion Falls national park, Uganda. "This image was created to show the scale of wildlife crime that is still happening on the ground in Africa today and shows the ongoing fight to save the world's last wild places " Quoted Paul Hilton Photojournalist . Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images  for Global Conservation No resales / No archives / One time use only
    _42A4256.tif
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9523.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X9386-2.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0593.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0588.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0586.jpg
  • Rangers from Uganda Conservation Foundation and the Uganda Wildlife Authority stand on top of a mountain of snares and traps. The thousands of snares weighing over 12 tons and have been collected over a 12 month period in Murchasion Falls national park, Uganda. "This image was created to show the scale of wildlife crime that is still happening on the ground in Africa today and shows the ongoing fight to save the world's last wild places " Quoted Paul Hilton Photojournalist . Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images  for Global Conservation No resales / No archives / One time use only
    _42A4229.tif
  • Rangers from Uganda Conservation Foundation and the Uganda Wildlife Authority stand on top of a mountain of snares and traps. The thousands of snares weighing over 12 tons and have been collected over a 12 month period in Murchasion Falls national park, Uganda. "This image was created to show the scale of wildlife crime that is still happening on the ground in Africa today and shows the ongoing fight to save the world's last wild places " Quoted Paul Hilton Photojournalist . Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images  for Global Conservation No resales / No archives / One time use only
    _42A4222.tif
  • Rangers from Uganda Conservation Foundation and the Uganda Wildlife Authority stand on top of a mountain of snares and traps. The thousands of snares weighing over 12 tons and have been collected over a 12 month period in Murchasion Falls national park, Uganda. "This image was created to show the scale of wildlife crime that is still happening on the ground in Africa today and shows the ongoing fight to save the world's last wild places " Quoted Paul Hilton Photojournalist . Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images  for Global Conservation No resales / No archives / One time use only
    _42A4213.tif
  • A fruitbat hangs in a cage, at a wild animal market in Jakarta, Indonesia. Bats are consumer in many parts of Asia, but carry many viruses, the origins of diseases such as Sars and Ebola can be traced back to these flying mammals, and they have also been implicated in the spread of the new deadly Mers virus. In Africa, the straw-coloured fruit bat (Eidolon helvum), the continent's most widely distributed bat, is known to host different infectious diseases. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0959.jpg
  • A fruitbat hangs in a cage, at a wild animal market in Jakarta, Indonesia. Bats are consumer in many parts of Asia, but carry many viruses,  the origins of diseases such as Sars and Ebola can be traced back to these flying mammals, and they have also been implicated in the spread of the new deadly Mers virus. In Africa, the straw-coloured fruit bat (Eidolon helvum), the continent's most widely distributed bat, is known to host different infectious diseases. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0918.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    ZP0B3894.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9794.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    ZP0B3893.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9768.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9791.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9492.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9496.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_9485.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X9393.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0639.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0604.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0596.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0590.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0587.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0591.jpg
  • A pygmy blue whale swims in the warm waters off the coast of Sri Lanka. The whales migrate off the southern coast of Sri Lanka every years from the horn of Africa to the Bay of Bengal, in the Indian ocean. The pygmy blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus brevicauda) is a subspecies of the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) found in the Indian Ocean and the southern Pacific Ocean. Reaching lengths of up to 24 metres (79 ft) Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0589.jpg
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