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  • A captive brown bear (Ursus arctos) climbs on a rock during a rain storm in a forested area of the Pacific Northwest. Brown bears are the largest land-based preditors and are found across northern North America, Europe and Asia.
    Bear_Brown_Captive_Woodland_3403.jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) flies low over Puerto Real off the coast of Esperanza on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, at sunrise. The brown pelican feeds mainly on fish and is one of only two types of pelicans that feed by diving head-first into the water.
    Pelican_Brown_Sunrise-Water_Vieques_...jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) is rendered in silhouette as it flies over Puerto Real off the coast of Esperanza on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, just before sunrise. The brown pelican feeds mainly on fish and is one of only two types of pelicans that feed by diving head-first into the water.
    Pelican_Brown_Silhouette_Vieques_846...jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) flies over the blue water of Puerto Real off the coast of Esperanza on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico. The brown pelican feeds mainly on fish and is one of only two types of pelicans that feed by diving head-first into the water.
    Pelican_Brown_Hunting_Vieques_6760.jpg
  • Three brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis) in their nonbreeding plumage hunt along the rugged Pacific Coast near La Push in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    Pelicans-Brown_OlympicNP_First-Beach...jpg
  • A Brown Pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) dives for food into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Brown Pelicans hunt in a unique way. They fly over bodies of water, spotting fish from as far as 50 feet (15 meters) away. Once they spot a fish, they dive, plunging into the water head first and scooping up the fish and the water around it in its large pouch. It quickly strains the water from the side of its bill and swallows the fish.
    Pelican_Brown_Mexico_Diving_3676.jpg
  • Three brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis) in their nonbreeding plumage hunt for fish in the water of the Pacific Ocean against a backdrop of rugged sea stacks in this view from First Beach in Olympic National Park near La Push, Washington.
    Pelicans-Brown_OlympicNP_First-Beach...jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in nonbreeding plumage hunts by diving head-first into the water of the Pacific Ocean in Olympic National Park near La Push, Washington. Pelicans feed mainly on fish they find at or near the surface. They can dive from heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more, filling their throat pouches once they hit the water. They then strain out the water and swallow any food that was caught.
    Pelican-Brown_Diving_OlympicNP_7798.jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) flies over the blue water of Puerto Real off the coast of Esperanza on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico. The brown pelican feeds mainly on fish and is one of only two types of pelicans that feed by diving head-first into the water.
    Pelican_Brown_Hunting_Vieques_0072.jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in nonbreeding plumage hunts by diving head-first into the water of the Pacific Ocean in Olympic National Park near La Push, Washington. Pelicans feed mainly on fish they find at or near the surface. They can dive from heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more, filling their throat pouches once they hit the water. They then strain out the water and swallow any food that was caught.
    Pelican-Brown_OlympicNP_Diving_6501.jpg
  • As a brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) with an extended throat pouch works on swallowing its catch, another pelican dives into the Pacific Ocean to try to catch fish in the Pacific Ocean off First Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington. Pelicans feed mainly on fish they find at or near the surface. They can dive from heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more, filling their throat pouches once they hit the water. They then strain out the water and swallow any food that was caught.
    Pelicans-Brown_OlympicNP_Feeding_770...jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in nonbreeding plumage hunts by diving head-first into the water of the Pacific Ocean in Olympic National Park near La Push, Washington. Pelicans feed mainly on fish they find at or near the surface. They can dive from heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more, filling their throat pouches once they hit the water. They then strain out the water and swallow any food that was caught.
    Pelican-Brown_OlympicNP_Diving_6943.jpg
  • A brown creeper (Certhia americana) climbs a tree, hunting for insects on the bark in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Creeper-Brown_Climbing_Yellowstone_4...jpg
  • The outstretched wings of a Brown Pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in flight mimics the shape of the mountains south of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
    Pelican_Brown_PuertoVallarta_Mountai...jpg
  • Ten brown boobies (Sula leucogaster) hunt for food in the Pacific Ocean near Sayulita, Mexico. The brown booby prefers to feed in large flocks and feeds by making plunging dives from 30 to 50 feet above the water (9 to 15 meters).
    BrownBoobies_flock_0214.jpg
  • Dozens of brown pelicans preen themselves and rest as huge Pacific Ocean waves crash into their rocky bluff at Pescadero Beach, California.
    BrownPelicansPescadero.jpg
  • Several brown boobies (Sula leucogaster) fly by crashing Pacific Ocean waves near Sayulita, Mexico. Brown boobies are common in tropical and subtropical waters and have a wingspan of 57 inches (145 cm).
    BrownBoobies_waves_0858.jpg
  • A large flock of brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis) rest and preen themselves among crashing Pacific Ocean waves in shallow water at Chapman Beach near Cannon Beach, Oregon.
    OR_Chapman-Beach_Pelicans_Panorama_3...jpg
  • A pair of brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis) share a Pacific Ocean beach with dozens of gulls in Cannon Beach, Oregon. The pelicans are displaying their breeding plumage. The gulls are predominantly glaucous winged/western gull hybrids, which are especially common on the Washington and northern Oregon coast.
    Pelicans_Gulls_CannonBeach_6332.jpg
  • A brown booby (Sula leucogaster) hunts over the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Puero Vallarta, Mexico. Brown boobies dive into the ocean to catch their prey, mainly small fish and squid.
    BrownBooby_InFlight_2017.jpg
  • Upper Tahquamenon Falls, framed by winter ice, drops 48 feet (14 meters) in Tahquamenon Falls State Park in the upper peninsula of Michigan. The upper falls are more than 200 feet (60 meters) across and portions of the waterfall freeze in winter. The water of the Tahquamenon River appears brown or red because of tannic acid that results from the organic material generated by the cedar, hemlock and spruce forests along the river.
    MI_Tahquamenon-Falls_Frozen_0931.jpg
  • The Tahquamenon River flows around ice in the river upstream from Upper Tahquamenon Falls in Tahquamenon Falls State Park, Michigan. The Tahquamenon River's brown color comes from tannic acid generated by organic material from cedar, hemlock and spruce trees along its banks. The golden light of sunrise reflecting on the river intensifies that color in this image.
    MI_Tahquamenon-River_Ice_1088.jpg
  • Upper Tahquamenon Falls, located in Tahquamenon Falls State Park in the upper peninsula of Michigan, flows through the thawing winter ice. The water of the Tahquamenon River appears brown or red because of tannic acid that results from the organic material generated by the cedar, hemlock and spruce forests along the river.
    MI_Tahquamenon-Falls_Frozen_1140.jpg
  • A captive grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) rests in a forested area of Washington state. Adult grizzly bear males can weigh as much as 800 pounds (360 kilograms), making the bear the largest land-based predator in the world. The grizzly bear is a brown bear, found across much of northern North America, Europe and Asia.
    Bear_Grizzly_Captive_4362.jpg
  • Red streaks are visible in the water at the top of Upper Tahquamenon Falls, a 48-foot (14-meter) waterfall in Tahquamenon Falls State Park in the upper peninsula of Michigan. The upper falls are more than 200 feet (60 meters) across. The water of the Tahquamenon River appears brown or red because of tannic acid that results from the organic material generated by the cedar, hemlock and spruce forests along the river.
    MI_Tahquamenon-Falls_Red-Streaks_112...jpg
  • The Tahquamenon River flows around ice in the river upstream from Upper Tahquamenon Falls in Tahquamenon Falls State Park, Michigan. The Tahquamenon River's brown color comes from tannic acid generated by organic material from cedar, hemlock and spruce trees along its banks. The golden light of sunrise reflecting on the river intensifies that color in this image.
    MI_Tahquamenon-River_Ice_1117.jpg
  • The range of green and brown colors in palm fronds are visible in this tight cluster of trees near the Malibu Lagoon in Malibu, California.
    Palm-Trees_Frond-Patterns_Malibu-Lag...jpg
  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5201.jpg
  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5255.jpg
  • After a heavy rainstorm, a burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) looks out from its perch among the wet rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Wet-Rocks_Ephrata_9187.jpg
  • A young great horned owl (Bubo virginianus) hides in the tall grass of the Palouse Grasslands near Clyde, Washington.
    Owl-Great-Horned_Owlet_Palouse-Grass...jpg
  • An autumn leaf blends in with the rock that it fell upon on a frosty morning near Spada Lake in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Leaf_Rock_Frost_Spada-Lake_6790.jpg
  • A Sika deer (Cervus nippon) poses in the grass along a marsh in the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge on Assateague Island, Virginia. Sika deer, also known as Asian elk, are native to Japan and are found naturally in eastern Asia from Siberia to Vietnam. They were introduced to Assateague Island in the 1920s.
    Assateague-Island_Sika-Deer_7670.jpg
  • A grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) feeds on berries in a meadow on Chief Mountain, located in Glacier National Park, Montana.
    GrizzlyBearMTClose.jpg
  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5163.jpg
  • The trunks of cherry trees emerge from a hillside covered with fallen autumn leaves in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Trees_Cherry-Trunks_Autumn-Leaves_85...jpg
  • Two bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) walk down the flank of Druid Peak in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Sheep-Bighorn_Yellowstone_5748.jpg
  • A pied-billed grebe (Podilymbus podiceps) displaying its nonbreeding plumage floats on a pond in Magnuson Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Grebe_Pied-Billed_Nonbreeding_Magnus...jpg
  • A song sparrow (Melospiza melodia) sings from its perch in a wetland near the Everett, Washington, waterfront. The song sparrow is the most widespread sparrow in North America.
    Sparrow_Song_Singing_Everett_0460.jpg
  • Several maple leaves, some dusted with frost, cover the forest floor in autumn in the Shelton View Forest, Bothell, Washington.
    Leaves_Autumn_Forest-Floor_Shelton-V...jpg
  • A grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) hunts for food in a meadow located in the Many Glacier section of Glazier National Park, Montana. Grizzly bears will eat both vegetation and animals. This one was feasting on blueberries growing in the meadow.
    GrizzlyBearMeadow.jpg
  • The contrasting colors of sea lettuce, a type of seaweed,  are visible at low tide at the edge of Puget Sound in Carkeek Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Sea-Lettuce_Carkeek_3542.jpg
  • An Assateague horse (Equus caballus), also known as a Chincoteague pony, takes a nap on a sand dune in the Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland. About 300 wild — technically feral — ponies roam Assateague Island on the Atlantic coast. There is some dispute as to how the ponies ended up on the island. Some researchers believe the ponies are survivors of the wreck of a Spanish galleon, La Galga, which sank just off the coast in 1750; the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service believes they are descendants of horses owned by early colonial settlers.
    Assateague-Island_Pony-Napping_Seash...jpg
  • A feral horse (Equus caballus) stands in Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota. Wild horses have lived in the badlands of western North Dakota since the middle of the 19th century, and about 100 horses currently inhabit the national park.
    Horse_Wild_RooseveltNP_1932.jpg
  • The bottom portion of North Fork Falls forms a wide cascade as it flows over reddish rock into Coal Creek in Bellevue, Washington.
    Coal-Creek_North-Fork-Falls_Cascades...jpg
  • A young arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) curls up to stay warm during a rainstorm near the summit of Thrihnukagigur, a volcano in southwestern Iceland. The arctic fox is also known as the white fox, polar fox, or snow fox, though it displays its pure white form only in the winter months. Arctic foxes, found throughout the Arctic tundra, are small with a body length of less than 3 feet (85 cm). To survive in such a harsh environment, they have very deep fur and a rounded body shape, which minimizes the portion of their body that is exposed to the elements.
    Fox_Arctic_Young_CurledUp_Iceland_28...jpg
  • A grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) feeds on berries in a meadow on Chief Mountain, located in Glacier National Park, Montana.
    GrizzlyBearFeeding.jpg
  • The evening sun shines through a hazy sky over Browns Slough in the Fir Island Farm Wildlife Area in Skagit County, Washington. The haze was a product of smoke from wildfires.
    WA_Fir-Island_Browns-Slough_Hazy-Sky...jpg
  • Grasses and other wetland plants are bathed in evening light as the water of Browns Slough flows through in the Fir Island Farm Wildlife Area in Skagit County, Washington.
    WA_Fir-Island_Browns-Slough_Golden_7...jpg
  • A brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in nonbreeding plumage hunts by diving head-first into the water of the Pacific Ocean in Olympic National Park near La Push, Washington. Pelicans feed mainly on fish they find at or near the surface. They can dive from heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more, filling their throat pouches once they hit the water. They then strain out the water and swallow any food that was caught.
    Pelican-Brown_OlympicNP_Diving_HeadF...jpg
  • Rockweed (Fucus distichus) grows along the edges of a tidepool on Fidalgo Island in Washington Park, Anacortes, Washington. Rockweed is a brown alga seaweed that grows profusely in the upper and middle intertidal zones. Its branches are tipped by swollen bladders, called receptacles, which allow it to reproduce.
    Rockweed_Tidepool_Sunset-Beach_Anaco...jpg
  • Several Western Gulls (Larus occidentalis) dive for fish in the Pacific Ocean off Chapman Point near Cannon Beach, Oregon. Western Gulls are rarely seen away from the ocean and are found along the west coast of North America from Washington to Baja California. The mostly white birds are adults; the brown birds are juveniles.
    Gulls_Western_DivingIntoOcean_Chapma...jpg
  • Sandy brown water seems to explode around a plains zebra (Equus quagga) as it runs through the Sand River in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. Zebras are part of the region's Great Migration. They follow the rain to reach productive grasslands, alternating between the southern Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya.
    Serengeti_Zebra_Splashing_Sand-River...jpg
  • Sandy brown water seems to explode around a plains zebra (Equus quagga) as it runs through the Sand River in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. Zebras are part of the region's Great Migration. They follow the rain to reach productive grasslands, alternating between the southern Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya.
    Serengeti_Zebra_Splashing_Sand-River...jpg
  • Rockweed (Fucus distichus) hangs from a sheer, barnacle-encrusted rock along the shore of Fidalgo Island in Washington Park, Anacortes, Washington. Rockweed is a brown alga seaweed that grows profusely in the upper and middle intertidal zones. Its branches are tipped by swollen bladders, called receptacles, which allow it to reproduce.
    Rockweed_Hanging_Sunset-Beach_Anacor...jpg
  • A variety of thermophiles, which are microorganisms that thrive in heat, are responsible for the colors in the Grand Prismatic Spring, located in the Midway Geyser Basin area of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. The yellow-green color comes from the thermophilic cyanobacteria Synechococcus, which is found in the hottest water of the spring (up to 161°F or 72°C). Phormidium, which is orange, is found in the spring's middle temperatures (113-140°F or 45-60°C). Calothrix, which is brown or black, is found in the coolest temperatures, although not lower than 86°F or 30°C. The terraces are the result of minerals that solidify in water that spills out of the spring.
    Yellowstone_Grand-Prismatic-Spring_B...jpg
  • Delicate stalactites, called soda straws, hang from the ceiling of the Painted Grotto in Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico. Soda straws develop where water droplets hang from the ceiling. Initially, a calcite ring forms on the ceiling. Calcite deposits continue to accumulate on the initial ring, and the straw grows longer as the deposits build up. If enough calcite deposits build up, the soda straws can develop into large stalactites. Calcite is a colorless mineral in its pure form. The presence of other minerals causes the stalactites in the cavern to take on yellow, orange, red, or brown coloration.
    CarlsbadCaverns_PaintedGrotto_1205.jpg
  • Brown pelicans dive off Natural Bridge near Santa Cruz, California at sunset. There used to be three arches, but the second one collapsed in the early 1980s. The first collapsed even earlier. Arches or bridges form when waves continually pound a weak spot in the rock, wearing a hole through it. Over time, continued erosion enlarges the hole so much that the overlying rock can no longer be supported and it collapses. A bridge is a span that connects to the mainland; an arch stands by itself.
    CA_NaturalBridge_SantaCruz_0358.jpg
  • A red sea fan (Callophyllis flabellulata) appears bright orange when exposed to ultraviolet light at low tide at the edge of Puget Sound in Des Moines, Washington. The red sea fan, a type of algae, normally appears dark red or brown. Strands of kelp glow bright red in this scene. The glow is the result of phosphors that convert ultraviolet radiation, which is invisible to human eyes, into wavelengths that are visible. This scene was captured under black light.
    BlackLight_Low-Tide_Red-Sea-Fan_Des-...jpg
  • A towering columnar basalt cliff is partially reflected in the waters of Breiðasund in the town of Stykkishólmur, Iceland. Columnar basalt is a volcanic rock formed when basalt lava rapidly cools at or very near the Earth's surface. Basalt, which is naturally grey or black, is rich in iron and can rapidly rust, taking on a reddish-brown appearance.
    Iceland_ColumnarBasalt_Stykkisholmur...jpg
  • A towering columnar basalt cliff is partially reflected in the waters of Breiðasund in the town of Stykkishólmur, Iceland. Columnar basalt is a volcanic rock formed when basalt lava rapidly cools at or very near the Earth's surface. Basalt, which is naturally grey or black, is rich in iron and can rapidly rust, taking on a reddish-brown appearance.
    Iceland_ColumnarBasalt_Stykkisholmur...jpg
  • Common rockweed, which normally appears greenish-brown, is bright red and green when exposed to ultraviolet light at low tide off Fidalgo Head near Anacortes, Washington. The glow is fluorescence, a type of photoluminescence, in which certain chemicals absorb light that is invisible to human eyes and emit some of it at a different wavelength that we can see. This scene was captured under black light at Sunset Beach in Washington Park.
    BlackLight_Low-Tide_Rockweed_Fidalgo...jpg
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