E-Daily Τα Νέα της ημέρας και ότι σου κάνει κλικ!
LOL Feed OMG Feed Retro Feed A-List Feed LGBTQI+ Feed
E-Daily

Oι 5 πιο διάσημες φωτογραφίες του National Geographic της χρονιάς που έφυγε

Φύση, άνθρωποι, ζώα

Δημοσίευση 4/1/2018 | 00:13

Oι 5 πιο διάσημες φωτογραφίες του National Geographic της χρονιάς που έφυγε

Πότε άραγε οι συντάκτες και φωτογράφοι του National Geographic, χορταίνουν από την άγρια φύση και την περιπέτεια; Mάλλον ποτέ! Γιατί πλέον, όλα τα social media είναι στα πόδια τους για να παρουσιάσουν κι άλλο υλικό!

Δείτε τις πιο αγαπημένες φωτογραφίες του 2017 όπως τις επέλεξαν οι χρήστες του Instagram!

Photograph by @thomaspeschak Galapagos Marine Iguanas live on the edge and the difference between life and death is a few degrees of temperature. The world's only ocean going lizards graze on cold water seaweeds. Increases in sea temperature due to climate change have detrimental effects on marine iguana populations. No seaweed=No iguanas. If temperatures continue to warm these Galapagos icons could become the first to disappear. The world's leading scientists have just met at @darwinfound in the Galapagos to discuss how to safeguard and protect the island's unique fauna and flora from climate change. To find out more follow @darwinfound #climatechangegalapagos

Η δημοσίευση κοινοποιήθηκε από το χρήστη National Geographic (@natgeo) στις

Photo by @CristinaMittermeier // This is what a starving polar bear looks like. Weak muscles, atrophied by extended starvation could barely hold him up. Our @Sea_Legacy team watched as he painfully staggered towards the abandoned fishing camp from which we were observing and found some trash to eat—a piece of foam from the seat of a snowmobile, as we later found out. People have asked why we couldn’t help it, why we didn’t feed it. In addition to being illegal to feed wildlife, polar bears like this one need several hundred pounds of meat to survive. They primarily eat seals and they struggle when they are stranded for long periods of time on land, without a sea ice platform from which to hunt. We didn’t have a weapon and we didn’t have any food. There literally was nothing we could do for him as we were hundreds of miles from the nearest Inuit community. What could we have done? What we did do was push through our tears knowing that this footage was going to help connect a global audience to the biggest issue facing us as a species today. It is true that we don’t know what caused this animal to starve but we are certain that unless we curb carbon emissions, sea ice will continue to disappear and many more bears will starve. With these images, we want to wake the world up to the imminence of climate change and to how it will affect wildlife and people for decades to come. For solutions on how each and everyone can make a positive impact on this planet #follow me at @CristinaMittermeier or go to @Sea_Legacy. #nature #naturelovers #bethechange #FaceofClimateChange #StopFossilFuels #NoArcticDrilling #TurningtheTide with @SeaLegacy. With @PaulNicklen and our entire team. Thank you @natgeo for helping us try and reach the world.

Η δημοσίευση κοινοποιήθηκε από το χρήστη National Geographic (@natgeo) στις

Photo by @ciriljazbec / Greenlandic dog is not a pet dog but a working dog that Inuit hunters and fishermen use for dog-sledding. They are the least know casualties of climate change. With the disappearance of sea ice, they have become a burden, which is why unfortunately some hunters are forced to shoot them. It is too expensive to sustain and feed them throughout the year when they can only use them for shorter and shorter periods of time. I took this portrait while crossing the frozen sea on my way to Siorapaluk, one of the northernmost settlement on the planet. Follow more from my Arctic journey @ciriljazbec #Greenland #Arctic #greenlandic #dog #climatechange #reality

Η δημοσίευση κοινοποιήθηκε από το χρήστη National Geographic (@natgeo) στις