1712 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
© André Pascal / Biosphoto
Bush-cricket (Holochlora biloba) in a Luckynut (Thevetia peruviana) flower, Reunion
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Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
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Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
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Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
© Robert Haasmann / Biosphoto
Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching Salmon, Brooks Falls, Katmai National Park, Alaska, USA
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Kamchatka brown Bear (Ursus arctos beringianus) eating salmon in water, Kamchatka, Russia. Glanzlichter 2013 - Germany - Highly Commended
© Pierluigi Rizzato / Biosphoto
© Pierluigi Rizzato / Biosphoto
Kamchatka brown Bear (Ursus arctos beringianus) eating salmon in water, Kamchatka, Russia. Glanzlichter 2013 - Germany - Highly Commended
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Kamchatka brown Bear (Ursus arctos beringianus) standing with salmon, Kamchatka, Russia
© Pierluigi Rizzato / Biosphoto
© Pierluigi Rizzato / Biosphoto
Kamchatka brown Bear (Ursus arctos beringianus) standing with salmon, Kamchatka, Russia
© Philippe Giraud / Biosgarden / Biosphoto
Flower of Cactus dahlia, Provence, France
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Grizzly (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching a salmon, confluence of Moraine Creek and Funnel Creek, Katmai National Park, Alaska
© Patrick Kientz / Biosphoto
© Patrick Kientz / Biosphoto
Grizzly (Ursus arctos horribilis) catching a salmon, confluence of Moraine Creek and Funnel Creek, Katmai National Park, Alaska
© Tobias Bernhard Raff / Biosphoto
Sockeye Salmon under water - Adams River Canada
© Meril Darees / Biosphoto
Grizzly catching Salmon in a waterfall - Katmai Alaska USA
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Brown Bear catching a Salmon - Kuril Lake Kamchatka Russia
© Valter Bernardeschi / Biosphoto
© Valter Bernardeschi / Biosphoto
Brown Bear catching a Salmon - Kuril Lake Kamchatka Russia
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Brown Bear catching a Salmon - Kuril Lake Kamchatka Russia
© Valter Bernardeschi / Biosphoto
© Valter Bernardeschi / Biosphoto
Brown Bear catching a Salmon - Kuril Lake Kamchatka Russia
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Grizzly catching a Sockeye salmon in Katmai NP Alaska ; The glaucous-winged gulls are taking advantage of the capture
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
Grizzly catching a Sockeye salmon in Katmai NP Alaska ; The glaucous-winged gulls are taking advantage of the capture
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Brazilian salmon pink female in nest Brazil
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Brown Bear in water fishing Salmon Katmai NP Alaska ; Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009
Animal Behaviour:
© Eric Lefranc / Biosphoto
© Eric Lefranc / Biosphoto
Brown Bear in water fishing Salmon Katmai NP Alaska ; Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009
Animal Behaviour: Mammals - Highly Commended
White-water fishing
Concours National Nature Images Projetées (FPF)
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Detail of a parasite on the mouth of a Meagre (Argyrosomus regius), Ile d'Oléron, France
© Bruno Guénard / Biosphoto
© Bruno Guénard / Biosphoto
Detail of a parasite on the mouth of a Meagre (Argyrosomus regius), Ile d'Oléron, France
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Zinnia elegans 'Oklahoma Salmon', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Candle Larkspur, Delphinium 'Red Lark', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Rocket Bronze Snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus 'Rocket Bronze', flowers
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Horizon Salmon Geranium, Pelargonium 'Horizon Salmon', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Horizon Salmon Geranium, Pelargonium 'Horizon Salmon', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Rose Decorosier® Isalia® 'Noat1804', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Zinderella Peach Zinnia, flowers
© 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
RM2557386JPG
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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Starling (Sturnus vulagaris) perched on a branch at sunrise, England
© Frédéric Desmette / Biosphoto
© Frédéric Desmette / Biosphoto
Starling (Sturnus vulagaris) perched on a branch at sunrise, England
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Water Avens, Geum rivale, flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Rosa 'Pullman Orient Express', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Flowering flax, Linum grandiflorum 'Charmer Salmon', flowers
© Alain Kubacsi / Biosphoto
Flowering flax, Linum grandiflorum 'Charmer Salmon', flowers
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Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from a young Atlantic
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from a young Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar, on salmon farm. Lumpfish is a species of cleaner fish, so called due to its natural behaviour removing and eating skin parasites from other species of fish.Sea lice are naturally occurring ectoparasitic copepods that attach themselves to marine fish and feed on mucus, skin and blood of their host. The salmon louse - Lepeophtheirus salmonis is of particular concern as it causes major health issues for farmed salmon including fin damage, skin erosion, wounds and a reduction in overall health and performance. If sea lice numbers are sufficient death can also occur. The treatment of them is currently dependent on a range of anti-parasitic chemical treatments, both bath and in-feed. The continued reliance and discharge of these chemicals combined with concerns about increasing resistance to their efficacy has led the salmon farming industry to introduce biological sea lice control with the use of cleaner fish that eat the sea lice from the salmons skin. Ballan wrasse and lumpfish are the predominant species used as cleaner fish, with a current heavy demand placed on wild capture fisheries to fulfil this demand despite the advent of farming for both species. Cleaner-fish, such as wrasse or lumpfish, live in the same cages as salmon where they attack and eat parasitic sea lice. generally have to be put into the cages in a ratio of 2 to 3 wrasses for 100 salmon. These cleaner fishes are used regularly to control sea lice on salmon farms in Scotland, Ireland and Norway.
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Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar, on salmon farm. Lumpfish is a
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar, on salmon farm. Lumpfish is a species of cleaner fish, so called due to its natural behaviour removing and eating skin parasites from other species of fish.Sea lice are naturally occurring ectoparasitic copepods that attach themselves to marine fish and feed on mucus, skin and blood of their host. The salmon louse - Lepeophtheirus salmonis is of particular concern as it causes major health issues for farmed salmon including fin damage, skin erosion, wounds and a reduction in overall health and performance. If sea lice numbers are sufficient death can also occur. The treatment of them is currently dependent on a range of anti-parasitic chemical treatments, both bath and in-feed. The continued reliance and discharge of these chemicals combined with concerns about increasing resistance to their efficacy has led the salmon farming industry to introduce biological sea lice control with the use of cleaner fish that eat the sea lice from the salmons skin. Ballan wrasse and lumpfish are the predominant species used as cleaner fish, with a current heavy demand placed on wild capture fisheries to fulfil this demand despite the advent of farming for both species. Cleaner-fish, such as wrasse or lumpfish, live in the same cages as salmon where they attack and eat parasitic sea lice. generally have to be put into the cages in a ratio of 2 to 3 wrasses for 100 salmon. These cleaner fishes are used regularly to control sea lice on salmon farms in Scotland, Ireland and Norway.
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Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from Atlantic
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Lumpsucker or lumpfish, Cyclopterus lumpus, eating salmon louses, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, from Atlantic salmon, Salmon salar, on salmon farm. Lumpfish is a species of cleaner fish, so called due to its natural behaviour removing and eating skin parasites from other species of fish.Sea lice are naturally occurring ectoparasitic copepods that attach themselves to marine fish and feed on mucus, skin and blood of their host. The salmon louse - Lepeophtheirus salmonis is of particular concern as it causes major health issues for farmed salmon including fin damage, skin erosion, wounds and a reduction in overall health and performance. If sea lice numbers are sufficient death can also occur. The treatment of them is currently dependent on a range of anti-parasitic chemical treatments, both bath and in-feed. The continued reliance and discharge of these chemicals combined with concerns about increasing resistance to their efficacy has led the salmon farming industry to introduce biological sea lice control with the use of cleaner fish that eat the sea lice from the salmons skin. Ballan wrasse and lumpfish are the predominant species used as cleaner fish, with a current heavy demand placed on wild capture fisheries to fulfil this demand despite the advent of farming for both species. Cleaner-fish, such as wrasse or lumpfish, live in the same cages as salmon where they attack and eat parasitic sea lice. generally have to be put into the cages in a ratio of 2 to 3 wrasses for 100 salmon. These cleaner fishes are used regularly to control sea lice on salmon farms in Scotland, Ireland and Norway.