Wild Wonders of China

  • Home
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • News
    • News
    • Newsletter sign up
  • About
    • The initiative
    • The Outreach
    • The team
    • The Photographers
    • Project Model
  • Partners
    • Main partners
    • Conservation partners
    • Partners
  • Press room
    • Press room
    • Press images
  • Contact
  • Social media
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
    • Tumblr
    • YouTube
    • Weibo
    • WeChat
  • Wild Wonders
    • Wild Wonders of Papua
    • Wild Wonders of Europe
    • Wild Wonders International
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
68 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • Tibetan antelope or chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii, three individuals shot from above on the Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-DJI_0182-1.jpg
  • Tibetan antelope or chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii, three individuals shot from above on the Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-2018-04-14-18-39-47--1.jpg
  • Tibetan antelope or chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii, three individuals shot from above on the Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-DJI_0183.jpg
  • Tibetan antelope or chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii, three individuals shot from above on the Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-2018-04-14-18-39-05--1.jpg
  • Tibetan antelope or chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii, photographed from above on the Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-DJI_0054-1.jpg
  • Mountains from above Aerial over the Tien-Shan mountains, China
    SWD-2016-10-03-094757.jpg
  • Mountains from above Aerial over the Tien-Shan mountains, China
    SWD-2016-10-03-093950.jpg
  • Mountains from above Aerial over the Tien-Shan mountains, China
    SWD-2016-10-03-094509.jpg
  • The Great Bend of the Jingsha River (later becomes the Yangtze River), Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-16-140454.jpg
  • Abstract drone shot of the Lochsa River, Yangtze ,Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-2018-04-14-19-35-39--1.jpg
  • Abstract drone shot of the Lochsa River, Yangtze ,Tibetan Plateau, Yushu, Haixi, Qinghai, China
    JDW-2018-04-14-19-32-05--1.jpg
  • Mountain landscape with trees in fall colours, Hu Zhu Pass, Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai, China
    SWD-2016-10-04-095528 (2).jpg
  • Mountain landscape with trees in fall colours, Hu Zhu Pass, Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai, China
    SWD-2016-10-04-095540_01.jpg
  • Yellow big Saturniid genera Anthorea moth on a stone in the Meili Snow Mountain National park, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-19-131250.jpg
  • Yellow big Saturniid genera Anthorea moth on a stone in the Meili Snow Mountain National park, Yunnan, China
    SWD-2017-10-19-131332.jpg
  • Girl with umbrella, Yichun City, Heilongjiang Province, China
    SWD-2016-07-28-162950_02.jpg
  • Mountain landscape with trees in fall colours, Hu Zhu Pass, Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai, China
    SWD-2016-10-04-095531.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-120026-18SN.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-115936-04US.jpg
  • The powerful hand of a dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115743-39US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115330-01US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, peeing, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114717-16US.jpg
  • Firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus, photographed from above sitting on ground in Tangjiahe National Nature Reserve, Sichuan, China
    SWD-2018-04-22-172242 (1).jpg
  • Alpine Accentor (Prunella collaris) foraging among rocks above treeline
    FPM-2018-11-06-004652-1396.jpg
  • Alpine accentor (Prunella collaris) foraging among rocks above treeline
    FPM-2018-11-06-004858-1407.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-152515-78S.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-115555-66S.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171002-112726-82USN-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-104812-28US.jpg
  • a young male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-102243-06US.jpg
  • Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, on the move, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-132548-43US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115653-27USN-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115502-13US-v3.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114316-73US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, hanging from a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113822-31US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113513-51US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113315-21US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-111111-22US-v3.jpg
  • Alpine Accentor (Prunella collaris) foraging among rocks above treeline
    FPM-2018-11-06-004810-1401.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152653-90US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152109-78US.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171002-112724-78US.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-123738-68S.jpg
  • a young male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-102529-26US-v2.jpg
  • Male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-103633-17US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115653-31US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115423-92US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115330-02US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115243-18US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115243-17US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113741-96US-v2.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113518-64US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, lying on a tree branch in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113512-47US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting on a tree branch in  Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-113042-96US.jpg
  • Bamboo above and a fan palm leaf below, East Lake Greenway park, Wuhan, Hubei, China
    SWD-2018-06-11-091440 (1).jpg
  • Swan geese flying in a line above desert, central Inner Mongolia, China. 列队飞行的鸿雁,内蒙古中部,中国。
    WWU-2016-05-26-053029.jpg
  • Alpine accentor (Prunella collaris) foraging among rocks above treeline
    FPM-2018-11-06-004649-1394.jpg
  • Emperor newt, Tylototriton shanjing, is also called Mandarin newt or Mandarin salamander (in Chinese 红瘰疣螈), Gaoligong Mountains National Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.<br />
<br />
It is a highly toxic newt native to a small area in Yunnan, China. They like to live in pools and slow-moving streams in subtropical forests at an altitude between 1 000 m to 2 500 metres above sea level.<br />
<br />
The major threat is over-collecting for traditional medicine. Small numbers are ending up in the pet trade, and its habitats are threatened by development for human settlement.
    MLU-20180421-115656-85US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171003-152356-21US-v2.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-123737-64US.jpg
  • Mother training her young on for a life in the canopy, Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20171001-104811-23S.jpg
  • Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, on the move, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-132549-45US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115654-34US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115353-50US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, eating baby squirrels, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115331-10US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree while eating a baby squirrel, Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-115314-83S.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114706-05US.jpg
  • Dominant male Black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor, sitting in a tree of the forest in Wuliangshan Nature Reserve in Jingdong county, Yunnan, China. This is one of four subspecies and this subspecies is named Central Yunnan black crested gibbon, Nomascus concolor jingdongensis. It only occurs in a small region around the Wuliang Mountain, between the Mekong and Chuanhe rivers in west-central Yunnan.<br />
<br />
Conservation: The black crested gibbon is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. An estimated 1300 to 2000 individuals are left in the wild.<br />
<br />
The black crested gibbon inhabits tropical evergreen, semievergreen, deciduous forests in subtropical and mountainous areas at high altitudes, from 2100 to 2400 m above sea level.
    MLU-20170930-114205-61US-v2.jpg