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Red deer stag (Cervus elaphus) roaring, with females (hinds) during the rut. When a stag and a group of hinds form a cohesive group, the females are sometimes described as a harem. The rut is an annual event that, in Great Britain, happens during October. This is when deer become sexually active and males fight for possession of females.
A closeup of white Agapanthus orientalis, lily of the Nile.
Mouse pea Vicia cracca. Valuable honey plant, fodder and medicinal plant.
Mule Deer Doe in East Central Idaho.
Side view of male Pampas deer with big antlers in in sunlight
Summer day in an ornamental garden. Lysimachia clethroides ( Gooseneck loosestrife) in full bloom with small white flowers. Be merged in the Primulaceae family.
Agapanthus (Agapanthus), flowers of summer
heimische Orchidee in den Bayerischen Alpen
wild flower
Hedge bedstraw (Galium mollugo) blossoms.
Wildflowers in the Canadian Rockies
Photo of roe deer in a field looking at the camera
Pronghorn Antelope in East Central Idaho.
Agapanthus flowers. Amaryllidaceae perennial bulbous plant.
A spring germinated annual, rather like M. altissima, but the flowers white, slightly smaller, 4-5mm, the standard petal longer than the wings and keel. Pod 3-5mm, hairless, greyish brown when ripe.\nHabitat: Open places, especially on arable land and fields, in waste places and alongroadsides, a fairly frequent weed or ruderal, to 1850m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Widespread through Europe, more local or rare in Holland and Scandinavia; naturalized in Britain and Belgium.
A flowering Lupine plant
Side view of a red deer hind (Cervus elaphus) walking in quiet morning sunshine. She is walking away from a harem group where the possessive male seems to have entirely missed her walking away. Stags are usually very active in trying to prevent a female from leaving a harem.
bright fresh purple lupin in the garden on a natural natural background
Orthosiphon aristatus, commonly called Cat’s whiskers, is a plant in Lamiaceae family, native to tropical area of Asia. It is upright trunked, used as a traditional medicinal plant. The plant owes its name (Cat’s whiskers) to its four long white to pale purple stamens, which stick out, looking like a cat’s whiskers.
a nice pronghorn antelope buck on the prairie
Purple flower growing wild
Close up of white agapanthus (agapanthus praecox) flowers in bloom
Eriodictyon californicum is a species of plant within the Hydrophyllaceae family. It is also known as Yerba Santa, Mountain Balm, Consumptive's Weed and Bear Weed. Hetch Hetchy, Yosemite National Park, California.
Gold barb Barbodes semifasciolatus Chinese barb aquarium fish
One Hartebeest antelope staying on the rock in the wild savannah
The purple bellflowers or nettle leaved Campanula trachelium are on a beautiful colored blurred green and violet background
Black neon tetra (Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi) freshwater aquarium fish.
a mule deer buck in the rut in autumn in Colorado
A young pronghorn stands in a field of sage in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
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