View allAll Photos Tagged pairing
Some of the IPs featured here on Universal are, let's say, less than blossoming. I'd struggle to think of a cartoon character less relevant in 2020 than Woody Woodpecker (I don't even know the name of the girl one).
A pair of EMD lease units are on the Cass Lake local as it heads west in the evening of May 8, 2007.
A pair of plovers running into the water at Solana Beach, California.
My photography runs on coffee. Please Buy Me a Coffee to help me continue making images. Thanks.
pair of goldfinches in my garden so excited to see them forgot to check camera settings sorry bit blurred
The goose on the left kept walking next to the other, honking loud words of sweet nothings in its ear. Anyway, that's what it looked like.
These beautiful birds, native to Hawaii, almost became extinct in the 1940s due to predators (including the non-native mongoose) and laws which allowed them to be hunted during breeding season!! Nenes used to be more common.
Prior to 1778 (when Capt. James Cook arrived) there were about 25,000 Nene. By the mid 1900's, wild Nene numbered less than 30. Breeding programs at Slimbridge in England and Pohakuloa, Hawaii have helped bring the current population in Hawaii up to about 3,000 birds. By 1957, when the Nene was named the Hawaiian state bird, efforts rescue were underway.
It is the only goose endemic to the Hawaiian Archipelago which exists; at least eight other endemic goose species are known to have become extinct.
More info is here www.aloha-hawaii.com/hawaii/nene/