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The ABC of Animals

Hey there, do you know your ABCs? How about your animal ABCs? If not, it's time to learn them, as we go from the A to the Z of beautiful animals.

abc of animal photos
A is for Alligator. This Alligator is white not because it's an albino, but because it is a 'leucistic' alligator, one of the famous white alligators found only in Black Pearl, New Orleans.
 
abc of animal photos
B is of course for Bear, as in these two grizzly bears enjoying a game of play fight.
 
abc of animal photos
C is for Cheetah, hunting on the Kenyan safari.
 
abc of animal photos
D is for this mother Donkey, nursing her foal.
 
abc of animal photos
E just has to be Elephant. In this photo - the elephant in the room people are ignoring.
 
abc of animal photos
F is for these cute Fennec Foxes, a whole family of them!
 
abc of animal photos
G is for Giraffes. These two are play fighting in the Ithala game reserve, South Africa.
 
abc of animal photos
H is for horses. In this case - wild horses in the Erlebnispark wildlife and theme park, Germany.
 
abc of animal photos
I is for this colorful Marine Iguana on Espanola Island, part of the Galapagos Islands.
 
abc of animal photos
J is for Jaguar. This yawning Jaguar can be found in the Toronto Zoo.
 
abc of animal photos
K is for Koala, a vulnerable species. This one seems like it just woke up.
 
abc of animal photos
L is for this ring tailed Lemur mother, holding her newly born twins.
 
abc of animal photos
M is for Moose, like this one photographed in Denalit National Park, Alaska.
 
abc of animal photos
N is for Narwhal, the medium sized whale that spends all year in the arctic. The male Narwhals have a long, straight tusk that is in actuality, biologists say, an elongated extension of their upper left canine tooth. That's some tooth.
 
abc of animal photos
O is for Owl. This common barn owl was caught mid flight.
 
abc of animal photos
P is for Penguin, what else? A family of emperor penguins in Antarctica agreed to pose for this shot.
 
abc of animal photos
Q is for Quoll. This animal is a meat eating marsupial which lives in Australia, New Guinea and Tasmania only.
 
abc of animal photos
R is for Rhinoceros, like this calm Rhino enjoying the water and the oxpecker birds pecking at the insects on his body. The Rhinos and the birds have an understanding: I won't shoo you away, and you will eat the bugs that annoy me.
 
abc of animal photos
S is for Seal. This 'teen' southern elephant seal can be found on the island of South Georgia, part of the South Sandwich Islands in the Southern Atlantic Ocean.
 
abc of animal photos
T is for Tarsier, the smallest primate in the world. Here are two of these adorable little guys clutching at a tree, their big golden eyes curious.
 
abc of animal photos
U is for Uakari, a larger, but still small, primate which has a short take but is apparently a good shaver, with no hair on its face. Their faces come in a variety of shades from pink to deep red, and they live in the tropical forests of South America.
 
abc of animal photos
V is for the dreaded Vulture. This one is a Cape Vulture taking flight at the Rhino and Lion Nature Reserve, South Africa.
 
abc of animal photos
W just has to be the big, bad, snarling wolf.
 
abc of animal photos
X is for Xanthareel, a yellow eel that always looks surprised.
 
abc of animal photos
Y is for the Yak, a long-haired bovine found throughout the Himalayan region of south Central Asia. The Yak is one of the oldest domesticated animals, and has been helping men out for thousands of years. This one is munching on some grain near the sacred Yundrok Yumtso Lake, Tibet.
 
abc of animal photos
And we end with Z, for Zebra of course! This zebra herd are slacking their thirst at a watering hole at the Etosha National Park, Namibia.

 

Submitted by: Jackie D.

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