Jared Lloyd | Wildlife Stock Photography

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80 images Created 3 Dec 2015

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  • a drake wood duck swims into a golden shaft of light in a cypress swamp at sunrise
    woodduck-drake-sunrise.tif
  • The islands and shoals that make our sounds both a treasure trove of natrual resources but also the trecherous labrynths that have claimed countless ships is caused by the flow and shoaling of sand behind the islands.
    skiff and shoals.jpg
  • a large buck pronghorn stomps his foot on a Ridgeline
    Pronghorn-buck.jpg
  • A massive American Crocodile hauls out of the water at the Cuero y Salado refuge in Honduras
    _DSC2937-Edit.jpg
  • A wild horse stands silhouetted against a dramatic sunset along the ridge of a sandbar as he stares out over the water. Black skimmers fly speckle the sky.
    _DSC4602-Edit.jpg
  • lovely-poison-dart-frog-6.jpg
  • egret in black.jpg
  • a red fox climbs a snow covered hill in Hayden Valley of Yellowstone National Park
    red-fox-Yellowstone-winter.tif
  • Northern-Cardinal-1189.tif
  • a lone duck silhoutted by the setting sun rises up from the water as the light explodes through the suspended water droplets
    duck-sundrop.jpg
  • a pregnant brown-throated three-toed sloth hangs from a cecropia tree on Bastimentos Island, Panama
    brown-throated-three-toed-sloth-1.jpg
  • An American Oystercatcher, Haematopus palliatus, forages along the edge of an oyster bed in a North Carolina estuary. Oystercatchers are a protected species in the state, their population dramatically falling over the last few decades due to disturbance of nesting areas by both off road vehicle use along the beaches as well as rising sea levels born of climate change. Oystercatchers are the only shorebird capable of prying open oysters and clams, which means many other species of birds will often follow oystercatchers as they forage in hopes of picking up scraps. These birds are one of the species that the Audubon Society and Southern Environmental Law Center sued Cape Hatteras National Seashore for allowing the oystercatcher population to go unprotected for many decades.
    oystercatcher--16.jpg
  • osprey-fish-5703.jpg
  • A bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) perches on a large piece of driftwood on the beach of Cook Inlet, Alaska. This is mature bald eagle, the light is soft and low, and the bird is watching brown bears fishing in hopes of scraps of salmon.
    Bald-Eagle-Alaska-4903.jpg
  • An alligator raises his head just above the surface of the water
    alligator-6436.jpg
  • eyelash-viper-0291-2.jpg
  • a newborn whitetail deer fawn lies hidden on the forest floor waiting for mom to return
    whitetail-fawn-9396-2.jpg
  • A large bull bison in deep snow walks through the ghostly forest of dead trees that were killed by the geothermal activity of Yellowstone National Park.
    bison-forest-snow-3.jpg
  • corolla-wild-horse-1335.jpg
  • black-bear-cubs-5736.jpg
  • brown-bear-alaska--5.jpg
  • black-bear-.jpg
  • A large black bear peers through the forest and into the lens. shallow depth of field for unique effect on the background and foreground.
    black-bear-2889.jpg
  • bison-blizzard-2226.jpg
  • bobcat-snow-1808.jpg
  • Bison-head-to-head-snow-8782.jpg
  • coati-Panama-7124.jpg
  • Pryor-Mountains-wild-horse-nimbus-00...jpg
  • Pryor-Mountain-Wild-Horse-Storm-2.jpg
  • coastal-brown-bear-9425.tif
  • wildhorse-sunset-water.tif
  • A young barred owl perches close to the forest floor in search of lizards while the setting sun glows in the background. Barred owls are also informally known as the stripped owl. Although these birds were once primarily found from Maine to Florida, the species has slowly spread west, following in the wake of cities and suburbs, hopscotching their way across the Great Plains thanks to planted trees, and now can be found all the way to the Pacific coast. Unfortunately, once the barred owtl reached the temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest, they began to compete directly with the endangered Northern Spotted Owl.
    barred-owl-chick-8224.jpg
  • black-bear-9672.jpg
  • Red-billed tropic bird flying into a nesting cavity off the Caribbean coast of Panama. Red-billed tropic birds are in steep decline due to climate change and the loss of nesting habitat. But in the Bocas del Toro Archipelago of Panama, their numbers remain strong
    red-billed tropicbird-5847.jpg
  • a great egret towers over a flock of white ibis with reflections down into the water
    wading-birds-6327.jpg
  • burrowing-owl-8430.jpg
  • A young barred owl chick sits on a carpet of resurrection ferns high in the canopy of a live oak hammock.
    barred-owl-9407.jpg
  • eastern-screech-owl-1922.tif
  • yellow-headed-blackbird-2962.tif
  • a young great grey owl perches atop a small spruce tree in fading light
    grey-owl-juvenile-.tif
  • An American dipper stands on a submerged rock in a whitewater river
    American-dipper-0803.jpg
  • A barred owl perches atop of a young cypress tree with early spring growth
    _DSC3256.jpg
  • A red cockaded woodpecker perched at the entrace to its nesting cavity with an insect trapped in its beak to feed its chicks inside
    _DSC6266.jpg
  • a black howler monkey with baby in the lowland rain forest of Panama A black howler monkey, from the neotropical rainforest of Panama, with an infant clinging tightly to her breast. Mothers and infants usually stay together for two and a half years, even after her offspring has reached sexual maturity at 18 months. Howler monkeys are among the largest of the new world monkeys, and they are the only species with variable fur color. Howler monkeys also happen to be the loudest of all land mammals on Earth, and the male's lion like roar can be heard from as far as 3 miles away.
    black howler monkey-8847.jpg
  • brown throated three toed sloth from the lowland rain forests of Panama's bocas del toro islands
    brown throated three toed sloth-1544.jpg
  • wildhorse-island-sunset-2.jpg
  • a newborn whitetail deer fawn lies hidden on the forest floor waiting for mom to return
    whitetail-fawn-9396.jpg
  • wild-horse-beach-sunrise-5476.jpf
  • A young black bear cub climbs down a tree in the forest with a dark background in deep shade
    black-bear-3387.jpg
  • Two young black bear cubs, known as Spring cubs or cubs of the year, lounge on a branch high above the forest floor. Black bear mothers, or sows, will send their cubs into the trees while they go off to forage for the day. Trees like this play the role of nurseries for young black bears, keeping them safe in the canopy of the forest. The cubs aren't always as patient as their mom wishes them to be, however. And after an hour or so, they get restless, playing with each other, or begin crying for mom. The sows will then come back to the nursery tree ever hour or so to check on the cubs, who immediately come scampering down at the first sound of mom's voice.
    black-bear-5736.jpg
  • golden-mantled-ground-squirrel-3122.tif
  • Fox-Dunes-6.jpg
  • A red-eyed tree frog from the lowland rain forest of Panama
    red-eyed tree frog-1712.jpg
  • A red-eyed tree frog from the lowland rain forest of Panama
    red-eyed tree frog-1693.jpg
  • jumping-viper-2.jpg
  • strawberry-poison-frog-4918.jpg
  • A unique green, black, yellow, and red color variation of the strawberry poison dart frog sits the edge of a leaf  in the lowland rain forest on Isla Colon in Panama. This color variation of the Oophaga pumillio is endemic to Isla Colon in the Bocas del Toro district of Panama.
    poison-dart-frog-Panama-27.jpg
  • A pine woods tree frog sits perched on the lip of a yellow pitcher plant at night in a pocossin swamp along the coastal plain of North Carolina Yellow pitcher plants are an insectivorous species of plant found in low nutrient soils all across North America. Interestingly, they also happen to have a symbiotic relationship with various species of frogs as well. The way this works is that the pitcher plant lures in insects by both the smell of the liquid inside of the pitcher plant and also the promise of water. The liquid that accumulates at the bottom of the pitcher plant is full of digestive enzymes that the plant then uses to break down the bodies of any unsuspecting insects that fall for this trap. However, from time to time a frog, such as this pinewoods tree frog can be found inside of the pitcher plant exploiting all of the pitcher plant's hard work of luring in the insects. At face value, you would think this is just a matter of the frog parasitizing the pitcher plant. However, as it turns out, the pitcher plant actually benefits from helping the frog. The frog eats the insects that come in and is then able to digest the insect much faster than the plant ever could. And as a result, the frog then excretes a steady supply of nitrogen and other nutrients the plant is looking for by luring in insects to begin with. Being that the frog has done the hard work of digestion, the plant can then more readily make use of those nutrients after they have been processed by the frog. Photo by Jared Lloyd
    pinewoods-treefrog-.jpg
  • brown bear alaska-3780.jpg
  • bobcat winter yellowstone-.jpg
  • Three mature bull moose go head to head in the snow.
    bull moose fighting winter-.jpg
  • An endemic Geoffroyy's Tamarin sits on a vine in the Panamanian rainforest
    Geoffroys-Tamrarin-9733.jpg
  • bison-snow-1632.jpg
  • a white-tailed buck in a regal pose along the banks of a river in heavy snowfall
    whitetail-snow-rockymountains.jpg
  • An eared grebe swims along the edge of the cattail marsh ringing a small pond in the endangered prarie potholes region of North Dakota.
    eared grebe prarie potholes-4678.jpg
  • great horned owl alaska-6128.jpg
  • A lone bald eagle perches on driftwood in the midst of a snow storm in Alaska. Large snow flacks are falling all around as the windblown snow above the ground creates and ethereal look and feel to the photograph.
    bald eagle snow-1222.jpg
  • roseate spoonbills flying-2655.jpg
  • A brown booby soars just inches above the waves on the Caribbean coast of Panama. Brown boobys are a pelagic species of birds closely related to gannets.
    Brown booby Caribbean-9142.jpg
  • ruffous tailed hummingbird on nest-0...jpg
  • A great grayowl sits in the snow after plunging from capturing a red backed vole in it's talons
    great gray owl snow-9531.jpg
  • countless red-winged blackbirds move in an enourmous flock across the winter countryside as the feed on cut over grain fields
    _DSC9748.jpg
  • A wide angle macro photo of an orchid growing from the prop roots of red mangroves. This photograph is from the islands of Bocas del Toro in Panama, and was created in Bastimentos National Marine Park
    mangrove-orchid-3191.jpg
  • western-diamondback-rattlesnake-5374.jpg
  • A biologist takes working with a young morelets crocodile by the light of a handlamp in Belize
    _DSC4712-2.jpg
  • A algae bloom overtas a millpond in Eastern North Carolina
    algae-bloom-drone-0035.jpg
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    cloud-forest-drone-3.jpg
  • a young great grey owl perches atop a small spruce tree in fading light
    grey-owl-.tif
  • horned-puffins.tif
  • brown-bear-reflection.tif
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