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"Offspring"
19,664 professional editorial images found
#13485888
22 Mar 2026
A great egret chick is seen with its parent at their nest in the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 21, 2026. Both parents share the responsibility of feeding the young, providing a steady diet of fish through regurgitation during the nesting season.
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#13429813
11 Mar 2026
Great blue heron chicks beg their mom for food at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 10, 2026. The chicks typically fledge around age 6-8 weeks.
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#13429814
11 Mar 2026
Great blue heron chicks beg their mom for food at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 10, 2026. The chicks typically fledge around age 6-8 weeks.
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#13429815
11 Mar 2026
Great blue heron chicks beg their mom for food at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 10, 2026. The chicks typically fledge around age 6-8 weeks.
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#13429816
11 Mar 2026
Great blue heron chicks beg their mom for food at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 10, 2026. The chicks typically fledge around age 6-8 weeks.
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#13429817
11 Mar 2026
Great blue heron chicks beg their mom for food at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 10, 2026. The chicks typically fledge around age 6-8 weeks.
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#13418905
8 Mar 2026
A great blue heron chick stands next to its mother in a nest in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 7, 2026. The mother provides constant protection and regurgitated food while the chick develops juvenile plumage over 7-8 weeks before fledging.
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#13418906
8 Mar 2026
A great blue heron chick stands next to its mother in a nest in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 7, 2026. The mother provides constant protection and regurgitated food while the chick develops juvenile plumage over 7-8 weeks before fledging.
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#13418907
8 Mar 2026
A great blue heron chick is in a nest at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida, on March 7, 2026. The mother provides constant protection and regurgitated food while the chick develops juvenile plumage over 7-8 weeks before fledging.
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#13342869
19 Feb 2026
A great blue heron chick interacts with its mother in Delray Beach, Florida, on February 18, 2026.
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#13252234
29 Jan 2026
A Lesser Adjutant stork feeds its baby in a nest on a tree in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on January 29, 2026.
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#12992654
16 Nov 2025
Meat is seen at a butcher shop in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, on November 15, 2025. Canadians eat products derived from cloned animals without ever knowing it. Health Canada quietly moves to lift long-standing restrictions on foods derived from cloned cattle and swine, removing them from the country's 'novel foods' list--a category that requires pre-market safety reviews and public disclosure. Once implemented, the change means cloned animal products (meats produced via somatic cell nuclear transfer) enter the food supply without labels, announcements, or public notification. Critics question the lack of transparency. Without labeling or notice, consumers have no way to know whether cloned-animal products (and their offspring) are part of their groceries. The update means that meat or dairy products from the offspring of cloned cattle and pigs can now be sold in Canada just like any other food. No label identifies them, no public notice marks their arrival, and no additional safety review is required.
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#12992666
16 Nov 2025
Meat at a grocery store in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, on November 15, 2025. Canadians eat products derived from cloned animals without ever knowing it. Health Canada quietly moves to lift long-standing restrictions on foods derived from cloned cattle and swine, removing them from the country's 'novel foods' list--a category that requires pre-market safety reviews and public disclosure. Once implemented, the change means cloned animal products (meats produced via somatic cell nuclear transfer) enter the food supply without labels, announcements, or public notification. Critics question the lack of transparency. Without labeling or notice, consumers have no way to know whether cloned-animal products (and their offspring) are part of their groceries. The update means that meat or dairy products from the offspring of cloned cattle and pigs can now be sold in Canada just like any other food. No label identifies them, no public notice marks their arrival, and no additional safety review is required.
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#12992675
16 Nov 2025
Meat is seen at a butcher shop in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, on November 15, 2025. Canadians eat products derived from cloned animals without ever knowing it. Health Canada quietly moves to lift long-standing restrictions on foods derived from cloned cattle and swine, removing them from the country's 'novel foods' list--a category that requires pre-market safety reviews and public disclosure. Once implemented, the change means cloned animal products (meats produced via somatic cell nuclear transfer) enter the food supply without labels, announcements, or public notification. Critics question the lack of transparency. Without labeling or notice, consumers have no way to know whether cloned-animal products (and their offspring) are part of their groceries. The update means that meat or dairy products from the offspring of cloned cattle and pigs can now be sold in Canada just like any other food. No label identifies them, no public notice marks their arrival, and no additional safety review is required.
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#12992683
16 Nov 2025
Lamb is at a butcher shop in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, on November 15, 2025. Canadians eat products derived from cloned animals without ever knowing it. Health Canada quietly moves to lift long-standing restrictions on foods derived from cloned cattle and swine, removing them from the country's 'novel foods' list--a category that requires pre-market safety reviews and public disclosure. Once implemented, the change means cloned animal products (meats produced via somatic cell nuclear transfer) enter the food supply without labels, announcements, or public notification. Critics question the lack of transparency. Without labeling or notice, consumers have no way to know whether cloned-animal products (and their offspring) are part of their groceries. The update means that meat or dairy products from the offspring of cloned cattle and pigs can now be sold in Canada just like any other food. No label identifies them, no public notice marks their arrival, and no additional safety review is required.
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#12902296
27 Oct 2025
The Brazilian Pantanal, the largest flooded plain on the planet, recovers after the severe fires that occur in 2023 and 2025. In the image, primates of the black-and-gold howler monkey species (Alouatta caraya) are with their offspring in Corumba, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, on August 15, 2025.
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