View allAll Photos Tagged Baboons
Olive Baboon family with a tiny baby in the woodlands of Lake Manyara National Park, Tanzania.
In this park there are huge numbers of baboons with some groups having more than 200 members.
The Olive Baboon is the most widespread among the baboon species and their close relatives
Olive Baboon or Anubis Baboon
Papio anubis
groene of anubisbaviaan
Babouin olive
Anubispavian oder Grüne Pavian
papión oliva, papión de Anubis o babuino de Anubis
anubi o babbuino verde
babuÃno-anúbis
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on a termite mound
Kwando river, Botswana
The world is like a book and those, who do not travel, only read the first page.
All rights reserved. © Thomas Retterath 2021
Hamadryas Baboon (Papio hamadryas) living in a large troop in the Ethiopian Highlands of Africa Rocks. San Diego Zoo. Once revered by Ancient Egyptians as representatives of the Egyptian god of learning, hamadryas baboons are also referred to as Sacred Baboons. Conservation status: least concern.
As it is often the case with wildlife photography, it pays to wait patiently for that special moment that adds an outstanding element to an ordinary sunset image. Luckily the baboons came down to drink water. (Satara, Kruger National Park, RSA)
Hope you will enjoy this photo !
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Olive baboon (Papio anubis), also called the Anubis baboon, is the most widely ranging of all baboons. This is one of a large troop that were found throughout our camp. Locks on screens were required to keep them out of our tent and belonging.
Elephant Bedroom Camp, Samburu National Reserve, Kenya, Africa.
Conservation Status: Least Concern
RKO_9056.Thoughts! A very relaxed Olive Baboon!
(Diep in gedachten)
Copyright: Robert Kok. All rights reserved!
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Female Hamadryas Baboon (Papio hamadryas) with already full cheek pouches, is enjoying the taste of fresh cucumber. She lives in a large troop in the Ethiopian Highlands of Africa Rocks.
San Diego Zoo.
Conservation status: least concern.
Baboons are primates comprising the genus Papio, one of the 23 genera of Old World monkeys. The common names of the five species of baboons are the hamadryas, the Guinea (also called the western and the red), the olive, the yellow, and the chacma baboons. They are each native to one of five specific areas of Africa, and the hamadryas baboon is also native to part of the Arabian Peninsula.They are among the largest non-hominoid primates. Baboons have existed for at least two million years. Baboons have diurnality and are terrestrial, but sleep in trees, or on high cliffs or rocks at night, away from predators. They are found in open savannahs and woodlands across Africa. They are omnivorous: common sources of food are grasses, seeds, roots, leaves, bark, various fruits, insects, fish, shellfish, rodents, birds, vervet monkeys, and small antelopes. Their principal predators are Nile crocodiles, leopards, lions and hyenas. Most baboons live in hierarchical troops containing harems. Baboons can determine from vocal exchanges what the dominance relations are between individuals. 31567
I was just playing around again inventing a creature.
it kind of looks like a baboon, it has a ways to go to be finished, I cropped of the body since it is still real sketchy.
Olive baboon, Tanzania.
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