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  • A captive gray wolf (Canis lupus) rests in a wooded area of the Pacific Northwest. The gray wolf, also spelled grey wolf, is also known as a timber wolf or a western wolf. In the western hemisphere, the gray wolf was once found throughout North America, but now is found mainly in Canada, Alaska and northern Greenland.
    Wolf_Gray_Captive_Woodland_3428.jpg
  • A pair of gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) swim in Puget Sound near Everett, Washington.
    Whale-Gray_Puget-Sound_4873.jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_5264.jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_2699.jpg
  • An Eastern Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) feeds on seeds from a maple tree in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. The Eastern Gray Squirrel is native to the United States east of the Mississippi River, but was introduced to several cities in Washington, Oregon, California and British Columbia. It does not hibernate, but does store seeds and nuts in tree cavities and the ground for the winter.
    Arboretum_Squirrel_Autumn_2482.jpg
  • An Eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) licks the trunk of an elm tree where a red-breasted sapsucker has drilled holes. Sapsuckers drill neat rows of holes in trees to feed on the sap, but their work attracts other animals. Insects are also drawn to the holes and squirrels, which are omnivores, will take advantage of opportunities to feed on the protein-rich insects.
    Squirrel-Eastern-Gray_Licking-Tree_L...jpg
  • A great grey owl (Strix nebulosa) looks for food from its perch on a burnt snag in the Blue Mountains of Washington state. The great grey owl, also spelled great gray owl, is the world's largest owl by length.
    Owl-Great-Grey_Snag_Blue-Mountains_7...jpg
  • A great grey owl (Strix nebulosa) looks for food from its perch in the Blue Mountains of Washington state. The great grey owl, also spelled great gray owl, is the world's largest owl by length.
    Owl-Great-Grey_Perched_Blue-Mountain...jpg
  • A great grey owl (Strix nebulosa) leaps from its perch to hunt in the Blue Mountains of Washington state. The great grey owl, also spelled great gray owl, is the world's largest owl by length.
    Owl-Great-Grey_Taking-Flight_Blue-Mo...jpg
  • The West Point Light, also known as the Discovery Park Lighthouse, shines above a beach full of driftwood in Discovery Park, Seattle, Washington. West Point Light was the first manned light station on Puget Sound and was activated on November 15, 1881.
    WA_Discovery-Park_West-Point-Light_O...jpg
  • Partially obscured by a smoky haze from wildfires, the sun prepares to set behind Whidbey Island in this view from Edmonds, Washington.
    Smoky-Sunset_Edmonds_3775.jpg
  • A rainstorm sits at the summit of Mount Si, resulting in a rainbow that falls at the mountain's base in North Bend, Washington. Mount Si is a 4,167-foot (1,270 meter) mountain that is a remnant of an oceanic plate volcano. It lies at the western edge of the Cascade Range of mountains.
    MountSi_Rainstorm_Rainbow_9440.jpg
  • A long exposure blurs the motion of Pacific Ocean waves on a foggy morning in Venice Beach, California.
    Pacific-Ocean_Waves_Fog_Venice_7314.jpg
  • At low tide, water carves a curved, shallow channel through the mudflats at Stokksnes, Iceland.
    Iceland_Mudflat-Curves_Stokksnes_509...jpg
  • A North American river otter (Lontra canadensis) swims in the still water of Ronald Bog on a foggy morning in Shoreline, Washington.
    Otter_Swimming_Foggy_Shoreline_7218.jpg
  • The motion of a glaucous-winged gull (Larus glaucescens) in flight is captured in this long exposure over Puget Sound in Edmonds, Washington. The gull had just caught a small fish in the sound.
    Gull-Glaucous-Winged_Flight_Long-Exp...jpg
  • A pair of horned grebes (Podiceps auritus) generate ripples as they swim on the water of Puget Sound near Edmonds, Washington. The grebes here are shown in their winter, nonbreeding plumage.
    Grebes-Horned_Pair-Swimming_Edmonds_...jpg
  • A red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) rests on a branch surrounded by golden autumn leaves in Magnuson Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Hawk_Red-Tailed_Foggy-Forest_Magnuso...jpg
  • The sun shines through thick fog that has settled over Borst Lake in Snoqualmie, Washington.
    WA_Snoqualmie_Borst-Lake_Foggy_9471.jpg
  • Dark storm clouds pass over the green water of the English Channel as viewed from the beach at Fécamp in the Normandy region of France.
    France_Fecamp_English-Channel_Stormy...jpg
  • Several erosion patterns are visible on the steep exposed hillside of Rucker Hill in Everett, Washington, near where Pigeon Creek empties into Puget Sound. At the top of the frame, a blackberry branch swings back and forth like a pendulum, carving a semicircle into the hillside.
    WA_Rucker-Hill_Erosion_7166.jpg
  • Dozens of magenta rose campion (Silene coronaria) blossoms stand out against their grayish-green stems and leaves in a garden in King County, Washington.
    Campion_Rose_Flowers_Shoreline_5769.jpg
  • Weathered driftwood rests against a large beach rock in Marina Beach Park, Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Weathered_Smooth_Edmonds_0...jpg
  • The edges of storm clouds catch the red light from sunset, casting reflections onto Puget Sound in this view from Marina Beach Park in Edmonds, Washington.
    WA_Edmonds_Beach_Stormy-Sunset_9982.jpg
  • A double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) leaves wake on the gently rippled waters of Puget Sound near Edmonds, Washington.
    Cormorant_Double-Crested_Wake_Edmond...jpg
  • Lichen and moss form patterns on an exposed rock face near Lake Dorothy in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness of Washington state.
    WA-Alpine-Lakes_Moss-Lichen_8076.jpg
  • The remnants of two large trunks from a fallen tree reach into Puget Sound, not far from Pigeon Creek, Everett, Washington. An 8-second exposure blurs the motion of the Puget Sound waves.
    WA_Logs_Puget-Sound_Beach_Everett_71...jpg
  • Shi Shi Beach, often named as one of the most beautiful beaches in Washington state, provides a stunning view of the Point of Arches, a chain of Pacific Ocean arches in Olympic National Park.
    OlympicNP_ShiShiBeach_Foggy_0869.jpg
  • The golden light of sunset colors the rocks at the south edge of Lake Ontario near Niagara On The Lake, Ontario, Canada. Lake Ontario is one of the five Great Lakes, and with a surface area of 7,340 square miles (18,960 km²), it ranks as the 14th largest lake in the world. In the Wyandot (Huron) language, ontarío means "Lake of Shining Waters."
    LakeOntario_NiagaraOnTheLake_9439.jpg
  • Numerous sea stacks dot the Oregon coastline at Bandon on a foggy morning. The area's most famous sea stack, Face Rock, is visible near the horizon at the left side of the image. According to Indian legend, Face Rock is a tribe member who was turned to stone by an evil spirit who lives in the Pacific Ocean.
    Bandon_Seastacks_Fog_6525.jpg
  • A rust-colored beach rock stands out from the others on Crescent Beach near Cannon Beach, Oregon.
    BeachRocksOrange.jpg
  • Autumn color lines the base of a large granite rock formation in the City of Rocks National Reserve in Idaho as a heavy rainstorm passes.
    Idaho_CityOfRocks_Autumn-Rainstorm_0...jpg
  • A very large flock of shorebirds, mainly Dunlin (Calidris alpina) displaying breeding plumage, fly at high tide over the Bowerman Basin, located in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. More than 30,000 shorebirds pass through the refuge each spring on their way to breeding grounds in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Dunlin_HugeFlock_Bowerman...jpg
  • A group of Dunlin (Calidris alpina), displaying breeding plumage, feed at high tide in the Bowerman Basin, located in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. More than 30,000 shorebirds pass through the refuge each spring on their way to breeding grounds in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Dunlin_Feeding_Bowerman_7...jpg
  • A large flock of shorebirds, including Dunlin and Western Sandpipers, fly over the Bowerman Basin mud flats, located in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. A long exposure shows the motion of the birds. More than 30,000 shorebirds pass through the refuge each spring on their way to breeding grounds in the far North.
    Shorebirds_LargeFlock_Motion_Bowerma...jpg
  • A large flock of Dunlin (Calidris alpina), displaying breeding plumage, fly at high tide over the Bowerman Basin, located in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. A long exposure shows the motion of the birds. More than 30,000 shorebirds pass through the refuge each spring on their way to breeding grounds in the far North..
    Shorebirds_Dunlin_FlyingMotion_Bower...jpg
  • A large flock of shorebirds, mainly Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri), fly in tight formation over the Bowerman Basin in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. More than 30,000 shorebirds stop in the refuge each spring to feed during their migration to breeding grounds in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Sandpipers_Bowerman_Refle...jpg
  • Thousands of shorebirds, mainly Dunlin (Calidris alpina) displaying breeding plumage, feed at high tide in the Bowerman Basin, located in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. More than 30,000 shorebirds pass through the refuge each spring on their way to breeding grounds in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Dunlin_Bowerman_Golden_88...jpg
  • A song sparrow (Melospiza melodia) sings from a perch high in a tree in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state.
    SongSparrow_Singing_5120.jpg
  • A marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris) sings from its perch in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Hoquiam, Washington. Marsh wrens have very large song repertoires. Western species know about 150 songs, on average; eastern species know about 50. Scientists studied one western marsh wren that sang 219 songs.
    MarshWren_Singing_GraysHarbor_5991.jpg
  • A flock of shorebirds, mainly Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri), feed in the mudflats of the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Washington as other shorebirds fly by. Tens of thousands of shorebirds briefly stop in the refuge, located near the city of Hoquiam, each spring on their way to breeding groudns in the far North.
    Shorebirds_Sandpipers_FeedingReflect...jpg
  • Thousands of shorebirds, mainly dunlin (Calidris alpina), fly over the Bowerman Basin in Washington's Grays Harbor. As many as a million shorebirds make a brief stop in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge each spring during their migration north to their breeding grounds.
    Shorebirds_Bowerman_Dunlin_5767.jpg
  • Thousands of shorebirds, mainly dunlin (Calidris alpina), fly over the Bowerman Basin in Washington's Grays Harbor. As many as a million shorebirds make a brief stop in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge each spring during their migration north to their breeding grounds.
    Shorebirds_Bowerman_6176.jpg
  • A fiery sunrise fills the sky over the mudflats of Bowerman Basin, part of the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge in Hoquiam, Washington.
    Bowerman-Basin_Fiery-Sunrise_8852.jpg
  • Thousands of shorebirds, mainly dunlin (Calidris alpina), fly over the Bowerman Basin in Washington's Grays Harbor at sunrise.
    Shorebirds_Bowerman_Sunrise_5833.jpg
  • Two Caspian Terns (Hydroprogne caspia, formerly Sterna caspia) chase another that has just caught a fish in Grays Harbor, Washington.
    Terns_Caspian_Chasing_9159.jpg
  • Thousands of shorebirds, mainly dunlin (Calidris alpina), fly over the Bowerman Basin in Washington's Grays Harbor at sunrise. As many as a million shorebirds make a brief stop in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge each spring during their migration north to their breeding grounds.
    Shorebirds_Bowerman_Sunrise_5249.jpg
  • An exceptionally large concentration of shorebirds flies over Bowerman Basin in the Grays Harbor National Refuge in Washington during the spring migration. This flock consists mainly of dunlin (Calidris alpina) and western sandpipers (Calidris mauri). As many as a million shorebirds make a brief stop in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge each spring during their migration north to their breeding grounds.
    Shorebirds_Bowerman_LargeFlock_6343.jpg
  • A black American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos), wings outstretched, flies against a gray sky over Edmonds, Washington.
    Crow_Flight_Edmonds_1175.jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) sleeps near a rabbit den in a prairie in the San Juan Island National Historical Park, San Juan Island, Washington. Red foxes were introduced to the island on a number of occasions in the 1900s. All foxes on San Juan Island are red foxes, even if they appear black, silver, gray, tan or other colors.
    Fox-Red_Sleeping_San-Juan_3894.jpg
  • Several monoliths that make up the Cathedral Valley of Capitol Reef National Park, Utah, are visible from the summit of one of the peaks that lines the valley. The monoliths are carved from Entrada sandstone. Some peaks are capped with gray marine sandstone, known as the Curtis Formation.
    CathedralValley_CapitolReef.jpg
  • Colorful moss and lichen grow on the rough gray bark of an Oregon ash (Orthotrichum lyellii) tree in Marymoor Park, Redmond, Washington.
    Ash-Oregon_Bark_Rough_Marymoor_5338.jpg
  • Haleakalā silversword (Argyroxiphium sandwicense subsp. macrocephalum) grows in volcanic cinder on the slope of the dormant Haleakalā volcano on the Hawaiian island of Maui. The rare Haleakalā silversword, which is considered threatened, grows at elevations above 6,900 feet (2,100 meters). The plant can have 40 or more sword-like succulent leaves covered with silver hairs, which are strong enough to resist wind. The plant is also specially adapted to the extreme high-altitude temperatures. The leaves and hairs are arranged in such a way to focus sunlight, raising the plant's temperature by as much as 36 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celcius). In Hawaiian, the plant is referred to as ʻāhinahina, which means "very gray."
    Maui_Haleakala_Silversword_6986.jpg
  • A red fox (Vulpes vulpes) sleeps near a rabbit den in a prairie in the San Juan Island National Historical Park, San Juan Island, Washington. Red foxes were introduced to the island on a number of occasions in the 1900s. All foxes on San Juan Island are red foxes, even if they appear black, silver, gray, tan or other colors.
    Fox-Red_Sleeping_San-Juan_2442.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) flies over the Bowerman Basin in Grays Harbor County, Washington, at sunrise.
    canada-goose-bowerman-8349.jpg
  • Numerous Northern Giant Horsetails (Equisetum telmateia braunii) in various stages of development are clustered together in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge near Hoquiam, Washington..
    Horsetail_NorthernGiant_Development_...jpg
  • Colorful bluebells are surrounded by Northern Giant Horsetail (Equisetum telmateia braunii) in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge near Hoquiam, Washington.
    GraysHarbor_Bluebells_Horsetail_7643.jpg
  • A song sparrow (Melospiza melodia) feasts on an insect along a tidal marsh in Grays Harbor, Washington. Song sparrows are found throughout North America and are about 5 to 7 inches tall (12 to 17 cm) with a wingspan of 7 to 9 inches (18 to 24 cm). The song sparrow uses songs to defend its territory and attract mates. Laboratory research shows that females prefer males that sing more complicated songs.
    SongSparrow.jpg
  • Numerous Northern Giant Horsetails (Equisetum telmateia braunii) in various stages of development are clustered together in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge near Hoquiam, Washington.
    Horsetail_NorthernGiant_Development_...jpg
  • Numerous stalks of Northern Giant Horsetail (Equisetum telmateia braunii) are clustered together in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge near Hoquiam, Washington.
    Horsetail_Stalks_Young_7653.jpg
  • Panning the camera during a long exposure creates an impressionistic view of these horsetails growing in the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge near Hoquiam, Washington.
    Horsetail_Impressionistic_7651.jpg
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