View allAll Photos Tagged environments,

Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg takes part in a demonstration in Bordeaux, southwestern France, on February 11, 2024, against plans to drill eight new oil wells in La Teste-de-Buch forest. (Photo by Thibaud MORITZ / AFP)

Weaselhead Natural Environment Park, Calgary, AB, Canada

The Inner Harbor in Baltimore is home to wildlife-friendly features, including rain gardens and conservation landscaping with native plants, seen on May 18, 2023. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

💚Celebrate World Environment Day!🌎

 

This month, get involved and inspired with World Environment Day 50% discount. 💪

Every environment and sustainability project that would like to use our Fabrication service can get the discount and support from FabCafe Bangkok.

 

*World Environment Discount is valid on June 5-30, 2022. Please submit your project or send us the FB message to make an appointment with our team.

💚Celebrate World Environment Day!🌎

 

This month, get involved and inspired with World Environment Day 50% discount. 💪

Every environment and sustainability project that would like to use our Fabrication service can get the discount and support from FabCafe Bangkok.

 

*World Environment Discount is valid on June 5-30, 2022. Please submit your project or send us the FB message to make an appointment with our team.

Permeable pavement allows stormwater runoff pollution to soak into the ground before it reaches Knitting Mill Creek, a tributary of the Lafayette River, at the Ryan Resilience Lab in Norfolk, Va., on July 26, 2024. The facility established by the Elizabeth River Project models sustainability in flood-prone areas, serves as a hub for science and the community, and was designed with the ability to be moved when sea level rise inundates the property. (Photo by Rhiannon Johnston/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Lara Mulvaney, a volunteer with the Anne Arundel Weed Resistance, poses at a county-owned property in Davidsonville, Md., on April 5, 2022. Anne Arundel County forester Bud Reaves founded a local Weed Warrior program called the Anne Arundel Weed Resistance to enlist volunteers in the fight against invasive plants. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

2nd year Environment students take a field trip to the Hebrides - 2013

One tribal citizen volunteer hand-weaved a small basket to transport oysters during the second annual oyster planting event at Chuckatuck Creek in Suffolk, Va., on July 27, 2024. The volunteers and nonprofits played an integral role in planting 9,000 oysters in Chuckatuck Creek on oyster reefs managed by the Nansemond River Preservation Alliance. (Photo by Rhiannon Johnston/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Members of the Environment and Natural Resources sector meet to review the six-year strategic plan and how the sector can contribute to the upcoming National Strategy for Transformation and Prosperity.

A white-tailed deer is illuminated by the red spotlight of Dr. Ela-Sita Carpenter, an urban wildlife biologist with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service at Masonville Cove Environmental Education Center in Baltimore on Feb. 23, 2023. Carpenter was conducting annual mammal surveys to assess the deer population at Masonville Cove, which has been restored for wildlife habitat and became the nation's first Urban Wildlife Refuge Partnership in 2013. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

A highly-detailed polystone environment, re-introducing Weta Collectibles to the world of Lord of the Rings.

Rain barrels store water at the Ryan Resilience Lab in Norfolk, Va., on July 26, 2024. The facility established by the Elizabeth River Project models sustainability in flood-prone areas, serves as a hub for science and the community, and was designed with the ability to be moved when sea level rise inundates the property. (Photo by Rhiannon Johnston/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Staff from the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay perform maintenance on a riparian forest buffer that had been planted at Keystone Dairy Ventures LLC in Peach Bottom, Pa., on July 7, 2022. The crew straightened the tubes protecting the young trees, which were planted in the fall of 2021, and fixed stakes that had become loose or broken. “Tree maintenance isn’t just important, it's critical,” said Jim Kauffman, Pennsylvania Forests Project Coordinator for the Alliance. “Ninety percent of trees planted would die without maintenance.” (Photo by Caroline Grass/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.

 

To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

UNC-CH Environment & Ecology Commencement Ceremony - Spring 2017

From left, Assistant Chief Ruth Hennaman of the Nansemond Indian Nation, Mindy Benkenstein of Ducks Unlimited and Lynn Gilbert, a volunteer with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and Elizabeth River Project, haul oysters onto a small boat to transport to an oyster reef restoration site during the second annual oyster planting event at Chuckatuck Creek in Suffolk, Va., on July 27, 2024. The volunteers and nonprofits played an integral role in planting 9,000 oysters in Chuckatuck Creek on oyster reefs managed by the Nansemond River Preservation Alliance. (Photo by Rhiannon Johnston/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

  

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Volunteer Jay Yoder (right) tends to a bonfire of invasive species at Beaubien Forest Preserve. Saturday was Yoder's second time volunteering at the site.

 

(Copyright WBEZ/Chris Bentley. Please contact me if you have any interest in using this photo and I will process your request.)

some of the things i see

Photo of a field of conservation farming in Koukouldi village, commune of Ténado.

Conservation Farming, a new agricultural practice to increase the resilience of farmers facing to climate change.

Submitted by Ilyasse KABORE and Boukary SALIFOU

das ist wohl eine sogenannte "Grünlandverbesserung durch Abtöten der Grasnarbe" "mit glyphosathaltigen Herbiziden" "bei entarteten Grünlandbeständen"

 

www.landwirtschaft.sachsen.de/lfl/publikationen/download/...

Volunteers worked on Discovery Hill to care for a network of naturalistic trails and paths. Their work focused on remulching pathways, which not only provide visitor access to the south island’s sweeping views but also create a healthy soil environment for the area’s native plantings.

Wallpaper of Can I Help You Seminar at Zweibrücken Campus of UAS Kaiserslautern - 19 September 2018

Family and friends of NSD staff having a wonderful time of team bonding and keeping our environment clean.

World Environment Day 2023 | Kigali, 5 June 2023

An important job of the A14 environment team was to monitor the full length of the scheme for wildlife that might need special protection measures. One of our land monitoring cameras spotted this badger in 2017.

A bluegill visits submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), also known as underwater grasses, growing at the Susquehanna Flats in the Chesapeake Bay near Havre de Grace, Md., on Aug. 6, 2024. (Photo by Rhiannon Johnston/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

1 2 ••• 58 59 61 63 64 ••• 79 80