View allAll Photos Tagged sambar

Ranthambore National Park, India

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179552391

Emerald forest: Ranthambore after the rains. Rajasthan, Oct 2019.

Coexistence - This Sambar dear was troubled by hundreds of ticks and it went straight to a crow. The Crow has readily accepted and started to clear the ticks from the Sambar's eyelids. A lesson for the whole world. Is n't it?

 

Photo captured in Bandipur

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179554743

At Tadoba, Maharashtra, India

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179546437

with piscologia at sambar, 11/14/11

We also saw Rhesus Macaques, Sambar (pictured) and Nilgai.

Nagarhole NP. Karnataka

On our way home from an afternoon trip into the bush we happened to come across a Sambar doe and her fawn. These are very timid animals but had my camera at hand and took this photo from inside the car with a little help from the lighting provided by the headlights. The mother is hidden in the background somewhere but the fawn stayed still long enough to take a few photos.

 

Spice Hut, Newark, California, April 17, 2008.

Possibly they have gotten used to the passing vehicles . It stopped by with no movement and was directly gazing at me . Worst i fear , than any stupid passerby - feeding them something in a polythene pack. That's it and the end of ecosystem . Lovely to watch those ears moving like a radar , detecting every single vibrations and sound .

 

Exif Data

 

Exposure 0.013 sec (1/80)

Aperture f/4.8

Focal Length 340 mm

ISO Speed 1600

Exposure Bias +1/3 EV

Flash No Flash

Exposure Program Manual

 

"VW Transporter T1" Styled

Ranthambhore National Park, Rajasthan, India

There were always Sambar deer in the fields just outside the Deramakot "village" after dark.

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5180168900

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179560745

Ranthambore Tiger Reserve

Date: 16 November 2020

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179557943

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179567289

 

This Sambar, Rusa unicolor, was photographed in China, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.

 

You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.

 

siwild.si.edu/wild.cfm?fid=5179551145

Sambar are found in habitats ranging from tropical seasonal forests (tropical dry forests and seasonal moist evergreen forests), subtropical mixed forests

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