화제의 동물들-Animals in the News
이 지구에 함께 공존하고 있는 해아릴 수 없는 종류의 동물들과
인간과의 밀접한 관계를 갔고있는 동물계를
다시한번 집고 넘어갈 때가 된 것 같습니다.
예를 들면 맨 처음 사진에서 보듯 잘 훈련된 "호카"라는 개가
병원에서 환자에게 애정과 편안 함을 제공 하고 있는
상황을 찍은 영상물 입니다.그런가 하면 또 New Jersey에서는
5개월 된 사슴이 화살에 맞아 머리에 관통이 된 것을 뽑아주고
치료해서 생태계로 보내주는 사진도 보입니다.
이렇게 여러각도에서 찍은 사진들을 한 번 보시져?
밑에서 들리는 음악은 오래된 거북이가 여러 동물들을
등에 업고 다니는 아주 잼있는 동영상입니다.
Animals in
the News
It's time again for a look at the animal kingdom and our interactions with the countless species that share our planet. Today's photos include fire bulls in Spain, a massive iridescent ammonite, an ostrich amid the chaos in South Sudan, and the stray dog that took a team of 100 people to catch in China. These images and many others are part of this roundup of animals in the news from recent weeks, seen from the perspectives of their human observers, companions, captors, and caretakers, part of an ongoing series on animals in the news. [38 photos]
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Janick Fetard, zoo
keeper, gives a cricket to a Tamarin monkey at the
family-owned Palmyre Zoo in the 44 acre pine forest of
Les Mathes, in the Charente Maritime region, France, on
November 20, 2013. The private zoo which opened in 1966
greets up to 800,000 visitors a year and is home to
around 1,700 animals of 170 different species.
Revelers set a
bull's horns on fire during the "Toro de Jubilo" Fire
Bull Festival in Medinaceli, Spain, on November 9, 2013.
The festival is an ancient tradition, where a bull is
tied to a pylon and flammable balls are attached to the
bull's horns, then set on fire before the animal
released. Revelers dodge the bull when it comes close
until the flammable material is consumed. The bull is
covered with a thick layer of mud on the back and face
to protect it from burns.
A harbor seal
wearing a satellite linked transmitter on its head,
after its release into the waters of Howe Sound in
Porteau Cove, British Columbia, on November 20, 2013.
The seal is one of two which had received months of care
at the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Center
after being rescued from the wild.
Employee David
Thomas poses with a rare iridescent ammonite at Summers
Place Auctions in Billingshurst, England, on November
25, 2013. The rare fossil discovered in Alberta, Canada
was expected to sell for $129,000 USD when it was
auctioned as part of the "Evolution" sale at the auction
house on November 27, 2013.
An injured bat
screams as a volunteer cuts "manja" (a strong string
coated with powdered glass or other abrasives used to
fly kites) from its wing on Makar Sankranti in Mumbai,
on January 14, 2013. The Makar Sankranti festival, which
celebrates the beginning of the harvest season is also a
day when Indians all over the country engage in duels of
kite flying. Generally the "manja" is used in fighter
kites where fliers attempt to cut the string off their
opponent's kite injures birds and other winged animals
who get entangled in the string at times fatally.
A young deer stands
with a hunter's arrow through its head, in New Jersey.
on Saturday, November 9, 2013, New Jersey wildlife
officials successfully removed the arrow from the
5-month-old male deer's head while the animal was
tranquilized at a wooded private property in Morris
County. The deer was later released into the wild. The
biologists who did the procedure say the arrow had not
damaged any major arteries or organs and the deer's
prognosis for survival was excellent.
A stray dog tries to
break free as city administration officers restrain it
with nets, at a residential compound in Zhengzhou, Henan
province, China, on December 5, 2013. A team of nearly a
hundred people caught the dog in the compound on
Thursday and took it to the animal shelter after many
complaints were filed from the residents saying the dog
had attacked people.
Six-year-old Lina
Ismer, daughter of the Tierpark Stroehen animal park
director, holds baby kangaroo "Karl Friedelich" in a
woolen cap in Stroehen, Germany, on January 2, 2014.
After the little kangaroo's mother died, Karl Friedelich
is now raised by hand by the animal park director's
family.
Villager Diomesio
Coelho Antunes, from Rumao Island, clubs an arapaima or
pirarucu, the largest freshwater fish species in South
America and one of the largest in the world, while
fishing in a branch of the Solimoes river, one of the
main tributaries of the Amazon, in the Mamiraua nature
reserve near Fonte Boa, Brazil, on November 24, 2013.
Catching the arapaima, a fish that is sought after for
its meat and is considered by biologists to be a living
fossil, is only allowed once a year by Brazil's
environmental protection agency. The minimum size
allowed for a fisherman to keep an arapaima is 1.5
meters (4.9 feet).
A man places a coin
on the offered 2.6-meter-long bluefin tuna at
Nishinomiya Shrine, the head shrine of Ebisu sect, a
deity of business, on January 8, 2014 in Nishinomiya,
Japan. People wish for growth of their business and
country's economy by placing coins on to the body of
tuna that are offered to shrine.
A dead cow washed
ashore in Ystad, Sweden, on January 10, 2014. The
carcasses of almost a dozen cows washed ashore in
Denmark and Sweden, puzzling police in the Scandinavian
countries. Since December 29, eight dead cows have been
found by people strolling on beaches in southern Sweden
and three in Denmark. All the animals had parts of their
ears cut off. Investigators suspect this was done to
remove the identification tags used to trace the cows.
A marksman in a
helicopter hits a wild elephant with a pink-tipped
tranquilizer-loaded dart during an elephant-collaring
operation near Kajiado, in southern Kenya, on December
3, 2013. Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) and the
International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) fitted
elephants with GPS-tracking collars enabling the
monitoring of migration routes and to help prevent
poaching.