![]() View image Go to the article Gray wolf (Canis lupus). |
![]() View image Go to the article Wolf carrying week-old caribou calf. |
![]() View image Go to the article Radio-collared polar bear (Ursus maritimus) female and 3-month-old cub. |
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![]() View image Go to the article Adult brown bear on Dog Salmon Creek, Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, Kodiak Island, AK. |
![]() View image Go to the article Black bear (Ursus americanus). |
![]() View image Go to the article Black-footed ferrets, almost extinct by 1985, are being reintroduced from captive breeding but still lack genetic diversity. |
![]() View image Go to the article American badger (Taxidea taxus). |
![]() View image Go to the article Three species of prairie dogs make up 90% of the black-footed ferret's diet; prairie dog burrows are also used by the ferrets during the day. |
![]() View image Go to the article Prairie dog control campaigns, like this one in Arizona, circa 1913, contributed to the decline of the black-footed ferret. |
![]() View image Go to the article Sea otter (Enhydra lutris). |
![]() View image Go to the article Sea otter (Enhydra lutris). |
![]() View image Go to the article Fig. 1a. Female manatee and calf. Individuals can be identified by their unique scar patterns; scars are usually the result of collisions with boats. |
![]() View image Go to the article Fig. 1b. A manatee often bears scars from multiple boat collisions. |
![]() View image Go to the article White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). |
![]() View image Go to the article White-tailed deer fawn. |
![]() View image Go to the article Desert bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis nelsoni). |
![]() View image Go to the article Tundra hare (Lepus othus). |
![]() View image Go to the article Wild horses (Equus caballus). |
![]() View image Go to the article Fig. 2. Hibernating cluster of Indiana bats. |