• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Ami Vitale

  • Archive
  • Website
  • About
  • Contact
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 14 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • Rabid dogs eat the remains of cow carcasses near Pinjore, India. India has the highest rate of rabies in the world and many believe it has to do with the near extinction of vultures who once ate the remains of the animals. Dr Vibhu Prakash of the Bombay Natural History Society has vultures in captivity near Pinjore, India in an effort to rescue the birds from extinction. Oriental White-backed Vultures, Long-billed and Slender-billed Vultures populations have all plummeted so much that scientists think all three could be extinct within a year or two. Ami Vitale<br />
    DSC_0095.jpg
  • Dr Vibhu Prakash of the Bombay Natural History Society has vultures in captivity near Pinjore, India. Oriental White-backed Vultures, Long-billed and Slender-billed Vultures populations have all plummeted so much that scientists think all three could be extinct within a year or two. Ami Vitale<br />
    DSC_0143.jpg
  • Dogs and birds scavenge through a dump filled with cow and goat carcasses that was once filled with vultures January 30, 2005 near Chandigarh, India. Farmers lament the fact that there are no longer any vultures to clear the rotting debris away quickly. Thebird has been dying rapidly from eating the poisened carcasses of cattle that had the drug Diclofenic used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0307.jpg
  • Men unload cow and goat carcasses at a dump that was once filled with vultures January 30, 2005 near Chandigarh, India. Farmers lament the fact that there are no longer any vultures to clear the rotting debris away quickly. Thebird has been dying rapidly from eating the poisened carcasses of cattle that had the drug Diclofenic used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0034.jpg
  • Dogs and birds scavenge through a dump filled with cow and goat carcasses that was once filled with vultures January 30, 2005 near Chandigarh, India. Farmers lament the fact that there are no longer any vultures to clear the rotting debris away quickly. Thebird has been dying rapidly from eating the poisened carcasses of cattle that had the drug Diclofenic used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0320.jpg
  • Men unload cow and goat carcasses at a dump that was once filled with vultures January 30, 2005 near Chandigarh, India. Farmers lament the fact that there are no longer any vultures to clear the rotting debris away quickly. Thebird has been dying rapidly from eating the poisened carcasses of cattle that had the drug Diclofenic used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0063.jpg
  • Men unload cow and goat carcasses at a dump that was once filled with vultures January 30, 2005 near Chandigarh, India. Farmers lament the fact that there are no longer any vultures to clear the rotting debris away quickly. Thebird has been dying rapidly from eating the poisened carcasses of cattle that had the drug Diclofenic used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0050.jpg
  • Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep the endangered vultures alive stands inside a cage being built for them January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0015.jpg
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0041.jpg
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)&#xA;<br />
    DSC_0255.tif
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0228.jpg
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0047.jpg
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0255.jpg
  • A vulture sits inside a cage at a center set up by Vibhu Prakash who is fighting to keep this endangered species alive January 30, 2005 in Pinjore Gardens near Chandigarh, India. The bird has been dying rapidly from eating the carcasses of cattle when the drug Diclofenic has been used  to aleviate pain. (Ami Vitale)<br />
    DSC_0060.jpg