This selection of photos will bring you the beauty of this world. These photos will make you see the world as it is— beautiful and amazing. We love to offer you the best wildlife photos of the week in order to show you how incredible this world can be and all the souls that are sheltered by it.
From white-tailed sea eagles that spend winter in the ice-free bay of Zolotoy Rog, Vladivostok before moving to the north-eastern coast of the Russian Far East to koala mother and joey seeking refuge on a bulldozed logpile near Kin Kin, Queensland, Australia, all these photos will certainly amaze you!
Check them out for more information and start to see our world through photos!
White-tailed sea eagles spend winter in the ice-free bay of Zolotoy Rog, Vladivostok before moving to the north-eastern coast of the Russian Far East.
Photograph: Yuri Smityuk/TASS
A swan stands on a snowy meadow at the Olympic Park in Munich, southern Germany.
Photograph: Chiara Puzzo/AFP/Getty Images
An amazing acrobatic display by the tens of thousands of Starlings looking to roost for the evening under the iron stanchions of Blackpool’s famous north pier.
Photograph: Alamy Live News.
Tourists walk under the blossoming cherry trees at a tea plantation in Yongfu Town in Longyan, Fujian Province of China.
Photograph: VCG via Getty Images
Kenya Wildlife Service rangers load a tranquillised elephant on to a truck during a translocation exercise in Solio Ranch in Nyeri County, Kenya.
Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters
Pelicans keep a watchful eye on a fisherman with his catch of whiting at St Johns County Pier, St Augustine, Florida, US.
Photograph: Gregg Newton/Reuters
The first crocuses appeared in Szczecin, Poland.
Photograph: Marcin Bielecki/EPA
Ducks dry off while standing on some high ground in a pond, Bekasi, West Java province, East of Jakarta.
Photograph: Darren Whiteside/Reuters
An Aldabra giant tortoise on Curieuse, Seychelles.
Photograph: Tate Drucker / The Nature Conservancy
A rose-ringed parakeet feeds in a tree in Izmir, Turkey.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Proboscis monkey, Malaysia. Researchers have found that male monkeys with large noses have more females in their harems, proving that size does matter.
Photograph: Ikki Matsuda/PA
Koala mother and joey seeking refuge on a bulldozed logpile near Kin Kin, Queensland, Australia.
Photograph: WWF