This a group for people who loves animals and nature. Here we talk about our favorite animals and nature environment. We also talk about the dangers of animals and nature. If you want to save the planet join this group. This group was created by me, the manager of the Anime Universe group.
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National.Geographic.The.Lost.Film.of.Dian.Fossey.DVB.XviD.MP3.MVGroup.org.avi
Dian Fossey spent 19 years studying the rare mountain gorillas of Africa. Heroine of the feature film GORILLAS IN THE MIST, her real life read like a Hollywood movie script with an intense romance and a consuming passion for saving the gorillas, ending in a brutal, mysterious murder. "Neither destiny nor fate took me to Africa," wrote Fossey from her camp in Rwanda. "I had a deep wish to see and live with wild animals in a world that hadn't yet been completely changed by humans." Uncompromising and determined, Fossey achieved much more by putting the plight of the mountain gorillas of Rwanda on the map, thereby insuring their survival for generations to come.
Broken Tail's Last Journey
A Bengal tiger's motherly love
08:44
World's Largest Snake Loose Walk Swim Climb Captivity Part 2
Video is Part 2 of World's Largest Snake Loose Walk Swim Climb Captivity at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBUSAB0G58g&feature=channel_page Fluffy, the reticulated python, Python reticulatus, shown here is considered the world's largest exhibited snake. Fluffy is 24 feet long, 300 pounds, and 15 years old. Fluffy's waist is the size of a watermelon. This video shows Fluffy after an enrichment session, where she was moved to a much larger enclosure (the world's largest indoor pachyderm exhibit - a secure location) and turned loose. These sessions allow Fluffy to exercise and explore. Fluffy is not only awesomely large and beautiful, she has personality. She is a sweet snake with a wonderful disposition. She recognizes people and will begin to look when certain people are about to enter her chamber. She rose her head up twice to look a zoo employee in the eye. Fluffy was supposed to make an airplane trip, but it was cancelled after the movie, Snakes on a Plane, came out. Jack Hanna of the Columbus Zoo, shown in the previous video watching Fluffy, has taken Fluffy on the David Letterman show. The paintings that were being made at the end will be sold on Enrichment Day, June 23, at the Columbus Zoo. More information will follow. Fluffy may be the closest anyone can come to seeing a real dinosaur for Fluffy is dinosaur-sized and as long as some houses. She is also very primitive, for the python even has a vestigial pelvis and hind limbs, which are remnants of its lizard ancestry, and can be externally viewed. They are strong with powerful muscles. Females are good mothers and, like mammals, protect their young. They incubate their eggs by coiling their body around them. They keep them at a constant 89 C and even shiver to maintain the right temperature. Fluffy has around 57 children. She is very photogenic. Not only is she beautiful, but she has the lovable face of Ollie of classic Kukla, Fran and Ollie show. (This was the first childrens show to be popular with adults and had ratings comparable with Milton Berle an
54:14
National Geographic - Dolphins - The Wild Side - Part1.avi
Close up view of Dolphins natural behaviour in the Wild
Hope and her family spend the night outside for the first time. This episode was filmed using night vision.
This is a quick introduction to one of our newest rescues - Freckles the LIGER! Freckles was rescued along with Alex and Cookie her tiger companions from a failed sanctuary formerly known as Cougar Haven in Mississippi. All 3 cats have been in quarantine for the past few months to allow them to get used to their new home. Now they are comfortable and doing well they are on the tour path at Big Cat Rescue, watch as Director of Operations Scott Lope feeds Freckles allowing you to get a good look at her different features. To read the full story on the rescue please visit: http://www.bigcatrescue.org/000news/0... To read the truth about ligers please visit: http://www.bigcatrescue.org/cats/wild... To read more about big cat laws visit: http://www.bigcatrescue.org/laws/laws... Thank you for watching!
08:19
NATURE | In the Valley of the Wolves | Web Exclusive | PBS
In the Valley of the Wolves premieres Sunday, November 4 at 8 p.m. (ET) on PBS (check local listings). In this video, Emmy Award-winning wildlife cinematographer Bob Landis discusses the making of the film, including the ideal circumstances for filming a predation scene; the importance of spending a vast amount of time in the field; the uniqueness of Yellowstone's Druid wolf pack, and more. Academy Award-winning actor F. Murray Abraham narrates "In the Valley of the Wolves," part of the 26th season of "NATURE," the Peabody and Emmy award-winning series produced by Thirteen/WNET New York for PBS. Major corporate support provided by Canon U.S.A. Inc. and Toyota. For more information, visit http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/wolves/
14:38
Dominance Interactions between the ambassador wolves at the International Wolf Center
Dominance interactions occur daily. You can learn more about the ambassador wolves by visiting http://www.wolf.org and reading their wolf logs.
a vid i made is also on yt it shows the pain and suffering of wolves in Norway
man among wolves
48:55
BBC Natural World - Lobo - The Wolf That Changed America
BBC Natural World Series (aired Wed 2 Apr 8.00pm BBC Two) Ernest Thompson Seton's account of how he hunted a cattle-killing wolf which then became a pivotal part of American history, helping to change the way people see wolves and the wilderness. In his efforts to find, capture, and kill Lobo, Seton came to understand the animal's intelligence, loyalty and warmth. Although he finally succeeded in his task, he never killed a wolf again. A combination of wildlife and history, this film is based on the personal diaries of Ernest Thompson Seton himself. credit to the BBC and original encoder (Zerofox@UKNova)
This is the story of studying Mars on Earth at Devon Island, the largest uninhabited island in the world located 500 kilometres southwest of the Magnetic North Pole. Devon Island is an analogue to Mars which has made it extremely interesting to NASA. Mars on Earth follows the largest scientific mission on Earth known as the NASA/Haughton-Mars Project. With exclusive access, we follow Dr. Pascal Lee and his team of 60 scientists in their exploration of Mars on Earth.
Wandering along a misty creek bed in northwestern British Columbia, appears a pure white bear the Tsimshian First Nation calls, the 'Ghost Of The Rain Forest'. But this ghost is real; one of the rarest animals on earth, and one of the rarest experiences in nature.
Numbering less than three hundred, The Northern Right Whale is the world's most endangered whale species. Every summer half the population migrates into the Bay of Fundy where, although whaling is long gone, fishing still poses a deadly threat to the future of the species.
The Thelon Game Sanctuary, located hundreds of kilometers north of the tree line, is a boreal oasis that should not exist. Rich with wildlife unparalleled on the Arctic barrens, it is both one of the world's oldest and largest wildlife preserves and in First Nation's legends revered as the place where God began.
The Pacific coast of North America is the largest laboratory on earth where on-going studies into the state of the Killer Whale reveal startling new information about the oceans we inhabit. Killer in Peril is a sobering report on our planet’s heath told from the unique perspective of an extraordinary animal.
No one has ever found a bowhead whale that died of old age. Biologists share their new research techniques as they confirm that bowhead’s may live longer than 200 years. We also join Alaskan Inupiat on a traditional hunt to discover new insights about the planet's eldest statesman
The North American west was once a wild horse dominion. In fact, as late as the 19th century, huge herds roamed the prairies alongside the buffalo. Today, only a few hundred remain wild. In captivity they literally will themselves to die. We photograph that rare sight of a wild mustang running free.
The sea otter's deft aquatic acrobatics are truly befitting of nature's prima ballerina. After a century of extinction on Canada’s remote West Coast, the sea otter’s re-introduction into the wild has forced it to share the stage with another specie that dances to a different tune.
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