African Elephants Moving Across the Savanna
African elephants are often a hazard for camera traps. They knock them down, kick them, and even eat them. June 7, 2010. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
African elephants are often a hazard for camera traps. They knock them down, kick them, and even eat them. June 7, 2010. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
Young male lion on a nightly foray. In Kenyan rangelands, lions may shift their social system from large prides to smaller groups that join and break apart on a regular basis. June 4, 2010. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
African elephants are often a hazard for camera traps. They knock them down, kick them, and even eat them. February 27, 2010. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
Secretarybirds are evolutionarily distinctive, ancient raptors that specialize on poisonous puff adders and cobras. February 15, 2010. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
Beisa oryx females in a Kenyan savanna. March 12, 2012. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
Aardvarks are among the most distinctive mammals in the world. February 6, 2008. (Photo Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society)
Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative have a collaborative meeting with partners to develop the 2015 Mesoamerican Reef Report Card to help safeguard the reef. October 2014. (Photo Credit: HRI)
Botanists Alicia Rojas (Botanical Garden of Bucaramanga), William Vargas (Universidad Icesi) and Hermes Cuadros (Universidad del Atántico) classifying plant samples from tropical dry forests
Botanists Ruben Darío Jurado (Universidad de Nariño) and Yamilé Díaz (Botanical Garden of Tuluá) digitalizing tropical dry forest samples.
JRS workshop with all partners (December 2013).