2030 pictures found
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level photo of two Sockeye salmon/ Red salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) swimming upstream as they migrate back to the river of their birth to spawn.
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level photo of two Sockeye salmon/ Red salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) swimming upstream as they migrate back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level photo of two Sockeye salmon/ Red salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) swimming upstream as they migrate back to the river of their birth to spawn.
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level photo of two Sockeye salmon/ Red salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) swimming upstream as they migrate back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Wolf (Canis lupus) on mudflats, Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
© Jack Chapman / Biosphoto
© Jack Chapman / Biosphoto
Wolf (Canis lupus) on mudflats, Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
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Wolf (Canis lupus) in forest, Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
© Jack Chapman / Biosphoto
© Jack Chapman / Biosphoto
Wolf (Canis lupus) in forest, Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
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Giant Pacific Octopus (Octopus dofleini) inking, British Columbia, Canada - Northern Pacific Ocean.
© Jeffrey Rotman / Biosphoto
© Jeffrey Rotman / Biosphoto
Giant Pacific Octopus (Octopus dofleini) inking, British Columbia, Canada - Northern Pacific Ocean.
© Óscar Díez Martínez / Biosphoto
Grizzly standing in grass - British Columbia Canada
© Tobias Bernhard Raff / Biosphoto
Sockeye Salmon under water - Adams River Canada
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Wolf-Eel eating Red Sea Urchin Queen Charlotte Strait Canada
© Jeffrey Rotman / Biosphoto
© Jeffrey Rotman / Biosphoto
Wolf-Eel eating Red Sea Urchin Queen Charlotte Strait Canada
© Brandon Cole / Biosphoto
Pacific Giant Octopus swimming British Colombia Canada
© Brandon Cole / Biosphoto
Pacific Giant Octopus swimming British Colombia Canada
© Brandon Cole / Biosphoto
Pacific Giant Octopus swimming British Colombia Canada
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Great Northern Loon (Gavia immer) pair with chick, British Columbia, Canada
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
Great Northern Loon (Gavia immer) pair with chick, British Columbia, Canada
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View from the summit of Mount Nublet on Mount Assiniboine, Mount Sunburst, Lake Magog, Lake Sunburst and Lake Cerulean, Canadian Rocky Mountains,
© Robert Haasmann / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
© Robert Haasmann / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
View from the summit of Mount Nublet on Mount Assiniboine, Mount Sunburst, Lake Magog, Lake Sunburst and Lake Cerulean, Canadian Rocky Mountains, Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada, North America
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American Wigeon (Anas americana) male bathing, BritishColumbia, Canada
© Jan Wegener / BIA / Biosphoto
© Jan Wegener / BIA / Biosphoto
American Wigeon (Anas americana) male bathing, BritishColumbia, Canada
© Jan Wegener / BIA / Biosphoto
Wood Duck (Aix sponsa) male, British Columbia, Canada
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Wood Duck (Aix sponsa) male swimming in a pond, British Columbia,
© Glenn Bartley / BIA / Biosphoto
© Glenn Bartley / BIA / Biosphoto
Wood Duck (Aix sponsa) male swimming in a pond, British Columbia, Canada
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Sooty Grouse (Dendragapus fuliginosus) male, British Columbia, Canada
© Glenn Bartley / BIA / Biosphoto
© Glenn Bartley / BIA / Biosphoto
Sooty Grouse (Dendragapus fuliginosus) male, British Columbia, Canada
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Marsh Wren (Cistothorus palustris), British Columbia, Canada
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
Marsh Wren (Cistothorus palustris), British Columbia, Canada
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American Coot (Fulica americana), British Columbia, Canada
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
American Coot (Fulica americana), British Columbia, Canada
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American Coot (Fulica americana), British Columbia, Canada
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
© Alan Murphy / BIA / Biosphoto
American Coot (Fulica americana), British Columbia, Canada
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Signboards indicating salmon run on the Tsútswecw Provincial Park. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
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Tsútswecw Provincial Park. The Adams River has one of the largest Sockeye salmon runs in North America. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Tsútswecw Provincial Park. The Adams River has one of the largest Sockeye salmon runs in North America. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Signboards indicating salmon run on the Tsútswecw Provincial Park. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
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Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) try to escape the bite from the males in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) try to escape the bite from the males in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) and male on the back in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river,
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) and male on the back in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon males (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon males (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
RM2557390JPG
Split level of a Sockeye salmon males (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon males (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split image of two Male Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka). migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split image of two Male Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka). migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon female (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split level of a Sockeye salmon male (Oncorhynchus nerka) in shallow water migrates back to the river of their birth to spawn. Adams river, British Columbia, Canada
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Split image of Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in their spawning river. Salmon die after spawning, but the nutrient boost provided by the
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split image of Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in their spawning river. Salmon die after spawning, but the nutrient boost provided by the decaying bodies, powers the food chain that ultimately feeds the young salmon. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
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Split image of Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in their spawning river. Salmon die after spawning, but the nutrient boost provided by the
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Split image of Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in their spawning river. Salmon die after spawning, but the nutrient boost provided by the decaying bodies, powers the food chain that ultimately feeds the young salmon. Adams River, British Columbia, Canada
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A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high antiquity. British Columbia, Canada
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A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high antiquity. British Columbia, Canada
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A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high antiquity. British Columbia, Canada
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A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high antiquity. British Columbia, Canada
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A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
A myxomycete in the rainforest of Vancouver Island. Fuligo septica, also called "Scrambled egg slime". Worldwide distribution, indicating very high antiquity. British Columbia, Canada
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Starry skate, Raja stellulata, a skate species that has so far avoided over-fishing due to its preference for rocky substrates where bottom trawling
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Starry skate, Raja stellulata, a skate species that has so far avoided over-fishing due to its preference for rocky substrates where bottom trawling is not possible. Barkley Sound, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, North Pacific Ocean.
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Starry skate, Raja stellulata, a skate species that has so far avoided over-fishing due to its preference for rocky substrates where bottom trawling is not possible. Barkley Sound, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, North Pacific Ocean.
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Starry skate, Raja stellulata, a skate species that has so far avoided over-fishing due to its preference for rocky substrates where bottom trawling is not possible. Barkley Sound, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, North Pacific Ocean.
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Spotted ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei, Vancouver Island, Canada.
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Spotted Ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei. Aka chimaera, chimera, or ghost shark. Barkley Sound, British Columbia, Canada. An abundant cartilaginous
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Spotted Ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei. Aka chimaera, chimera, or ghost shark. Barkley Sound, British Columbia, Canada. An abundant cartilaginous species frequently seen by divers in the Pacific Northwest.
© Andy Murch / Biosphoto
Spotted Ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei. Aka chimaera, chimera, or ghost shark. Tahsis Inlet, British Columbia, Canada. An abundant cartilaginous species frequently seen by divers in the Pacific Northwest.