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"turtle breeding"
28 professional editorial images found
#12399349
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a baby turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, in Kamrup district of India's northeastern state of Assam, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399352
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar collects turtle eggs from the banks of a pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo in Kamrup district of India's northeastern state of Assam, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399344
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a baby turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399345
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a baby turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399346
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a baby turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399347
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a baby turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399348
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399350
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar holds a turtle near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399351
23 May 2025
Turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar checks boxes where turtle eggs are kept at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399353
23 May 2025
A turtle feeds on food given by turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar in a pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo in Kamrup district of India's northeastern state of Assam, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399354
23 May 2025
A turtle feeds on food given by turtle caretaker Pranab Malakar in a pond at Hayagriva Madhava temple in Hajo in Kamrup district of India's northeastern state of Assam, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#12399343
23 May 2025
A baby turtle is kept in a bucket near the pond at Hayagriva Madhava Temple in Hajo, Kamrup district, Assam, India, on June 30, 2021. Pranab Malakar creates breeding spots for turtles and also builds an incubation room for the turtle eggs and a nursery, where he rears the hatchlings for six months before releasing them into the wild.
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#6842922
30 June 2021
A resident shows a green turtle calf (Chelonia mydas) before being released into the sea on the beach of Lalombi Village, South Banawa District, Donggala Regency, Central Sulawesi Priovinsi, Indonesia on June 30, 2021. The release of the green turtle chick by the Bonebula Foundation and the Baturoko Mangrove Farmers Group is a education to local residents to be more friendly to the animals that make the coastal area their habitat. Six of the seven species of sea turtles in the world, including the Green Turtle, live in Indonesian waters as a habitat for foraging and breeding, or simply migrating from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and vice versa. The number of green turtles has decreased from year to year. The main threats are hunting and trading of eggs and body parts, damage to nesting habitat due to development in coastal areas, and threats at sea from fishing activities.
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#6842924
30 June 2021
A child shows a green turtle chick (Chelonia mydas) before being released into the sea on the beach of Lalombi Village, South Banawa District, Donggala Regency, Central Sulawesi Priovinsi, Indonesia on June 30, 2021. The release of the green turtle chick by the Bonebula Foundation and the Baturoko Mangrove Farmers Group is a education to local residents to be more friendly to the animals that make the coastal area their habitat. Six of the seven species of sea turtles in the world, including the Green Turtle, live in Indonesian waters as a habitat for foraging and breeding, or simply migrating from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and vice versa. The number of green turtles has decreased from year to year. The main threats are hunting and trading of eggs and body parts, damage to nesting habitat due to development in coastal areas, and threats at sea from fishing activities.
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#6842926
30 June 2021
Residents shows a green turtle calf (Chelonia mydas) before being released into the sea on the beach of Lalombi Village, South Banawa District, Donggala Regency, Central Sulawesi Priovinsi, Indonesia on June 30, 2021. The release of the green turtle chick by the Bonebula Foundation and the Baturoko Mangrove Farmers Group is a education to local residents to be more friendly to the animals that make the coastal area their habitat. Six of the seven species of sea turtles in the world, including the Green Turtle, live in Indonesian waters as a habitat for foraging and breeding, or simply migrating from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and vice versa. The number of green turtles has decreased from year to year. The main threats are hunting and trading of eggs and body parts, damage to nesting habitat due to development in coastal areas, and threats at sea from fishing activities.
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#6842928
30 June 2021
A resident escorts a green turtle calf (Chelonia mydas) when it is released into the sea at the beach of Lalombi Village, South Banawa District, Donggala Regency, Central Sulawesi Priovinsi, Indonesia on June 30, 2021. The release of the green turtle chick by the Bonebula Foundation and the Baturoko Mangrove Farmers Group is a education to local residents to be more friendly to the animals that make the coastal area their habitat. Six of the seven species of sea turtles in the world, including the Green Turtle, live in Indonesian waters as a habitat for foraging and breeding, or simply migrating from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and vice versa. The number of green turtles has decreased from year to year. The main threats are hunting and trading of eggs and body parts, damage to nesting habitat due to development in coastal areas, and threats at sea from fishing activities.
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