Fotopedia > Wildlife photography
African elephant Elephant Amboseli National Park Elephantidae Herbivore Wildlife photography Wildlife of Kenya Big Five game Mammal Fauna of Africa Megafauna
 
 
0
 
Your clipboard is empty.
You can drop photos from your desktop here to upload them.
 
photo by
cheetah
buffalo
Leopard
Wildlife photography
Wildlife
Topi
Vitória - 19 Fevereiro 2010 135
Animal
Zebras - Ngorongoro
Leopard, Serengeti
Honey Badger - Serengeti
Amboseli Bull Elephant
Lioness, Serengeti
Chital Deer, Ranthambore National Park, India
Red Fox
Juvenile Parson's Chamaleon
African elephant
undefined
Wildlife photography
chevrette b2
Renard
Impala c1
Serengeti
chevreuil b2
European beeeater in white
Circus pygargus
Australian Green Tree Frog
Red panda
Saltwater Crocodile
Lion
Rotate to exit slide mode
Wildlife photography

Wildlife photography is the act of taking photographs of wildlife.

Wildlife photography is regarded as one of the more challenging forms of photography. As well as needing sound technical skills, such as being able to expose correctly, wildlife photographers generally need good field craft skills. For example, some animals are difficult to approach and thus a knowledge of the animal's behavior is needed in order to be able to predict their actions. Photographing some species may require stalking skills or the use of a hide/blind for concealment.

While wildlife photographs can be taken using basic equipment, successful photography of some types of wildlife requires specialist equipment, such as macro lenses for insects, long focal length lenses for birds and underwater cameras for marine life. However, a great wildlife photograph can also be the result of being in the right place at the right time.

In the early days of photography, it was almost impossible to get a photograph of wildlife, due to the slow lenses and the low sensitivity of early photographic media.

TEXT FROM WIKIPEDIA, cba SOME RIGHTS RESERVED.
African elephant

African elephants are the elephants of the genus Loxodonta (Greek for 'oblique-sided tooth'), consisting of two extant species: the African bush elephant and the smaller African forest elephant. Loxodonta is one of the two existing genera in the family Elephantidae. Although it is commonly believed that the genus was named by Georges Cuvier in 1825, Cuvier spelled it "Loxodonte". An anonymous author romanized the spelling to "Loxodonta", and the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) recognizes this as the proper authority.

Fossil members of Loxodonta have only been found in Africa, where they developed in the middle Pliocene.

TEXT FROM WIKIPEDIA, cba SOME RIGHTS RESERVED.
 My Pictures  Community Pictures  on Fotopedia  on Flickr 
 
  
advanced options
 Entire Content  Title  Author 
 Upload Pictures 
 Cancel  Ok 
Tweet
Message
 Cancel  OK  Other 
 
 Cancel  OK  Other