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    Categories: Nature

Best Wildlife Photos of the Week

Picturing the best wildlife photos of the week. This selection will certainly amaze you, because Mother Nature is unique. We’ve gathered these pictures to give you a clue about what happened this week in wildlife, so don’t miss this article.

From a sparrow that sits in a puddle as cherry blossom is reflected in the water in Washington to beached pilot whales on the west coast of New Zealand’s South Island (about 38 whales were found stranded), these photos will give you thrills.

Check them out for more information and start to see our world through photos!

A sparrow sits in a puddle as cherry blossom is reflected in the water in Washington.
Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Brown hares play on arable farmland near the Borders town of Kelso.
Photograph: Chris Strickland/Alamy

A wild yak in the Altun mountains reserve in north-west China’s Xinjiang region.
Photograph: Jiang Wenyao/Xinhua/Barcroft Images

A bighorn ewe in Challis, Idaho.
Photograph: Northwest Wild Images/Alamy

A newly identified population of sperm whales in the Indian Ocean is attracting the attention of scientists, conservationists – and now tourists too.
Photograph: Andrew Sutton

A bluethroat sits on a stalk in the Wagbachniederung nature reserve in Waghäusel, near Karlsruhe in Germany.
Photograph: Ronald Wittek/EPA

A baby chimpanzee riding on an adult’s back in Zambia’s Chingola district.
Photograph: Naomi Roe/Alamy Stock Photo

Four-year-old female southern white rhino Abby has her ear cut by Kenya Wildlife Services rangers as an identification exercise at Meru national park, Kenya.
Photograph: Dai Kurokawa/EPA

Mexican divers rescued a whale that had a fishing net entangled around its head, preventing it from feeding, in La Paz Bay, Baja California.
Photograph: Profepa Handout/EPA

A white wagtail on blossom in central China’s Henan province.
Photograph: Mei Yongcun/Xinhua/Barcroft Images

Howler monkeys (also known as bugios) in a wildlife refuge are being released back into the wild in Brazil. Many were rescued after being mistakenly blamed for the country’s worst outbreak of yellow fever in decades last year. The virus can be transmitted to humans and monkeys, and thousands of monkeys died early last year. Most of the deaths were caused by the virus, but some monkeys were shot or beaten to death by Brazilians who wrongly believed them to be responsible for transmitting the virus.
Photograph: Victor Moriyama/Getty Images

Beached pilot whales on the west coast of New Zealand’s South Island. About 38 whales were found stranded at the mouth of the Okuru river, just south of Haast.
Photograph: AP

 

 

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