Content Filed Under "tuli"
Amazing Leopard sighting!
Volunteers watch a Leopard Kill at Tuli It was an hour or so after sunrise on Friday March 28th and without a cloud in the sky it was already beginning to get hot. As we drove towards the north of...
Huge Crocodile caught on camera!
Incredible sighting of a croc catching an impala! Eye witness account - Cat Carr Subsequent to watching "The Last Feast of the Crocodiles", all the students on the Tuli project looked at the Li...
Morning Patrol
This picture was taken by David Wright, winner of ACE photo competition and past volunteer.
Feeding Frenzy
The Marabou Stork, Leptoptilos crumeniferus, is one of the largest flying birds in the world. Marabou Storks will eat just about any kind of animal, dead or alive and have evolved their naked heads and necks as an adaptation for feeding on large animal carcasses without getting their head feathers soiled with blood.
A pair of white fronted bee-eaters
Photo taken by Robert Staritz who came 3rd in ACE's photo competition. The white fronted bee-eater, Merops bullockoides, gets it's name from it's distinctive white forehead and diet of insects , which is almost always honey bees. These bee-eaters live in a very complex society, nesting in colonies made up of family clans where non-breeding birds become helpers for their breeding relatives.
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