Picture No. 12020769Streaked spinefoot, Siganus javus. Several animals eating a piece of a plastic bottle. Group of animals eating a jellyfish
Picture No. 12020767Stellate puffer, Arothron stellatus, eating a plastic bottle. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020766Yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares eating a styrofoam cup. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020758Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage floating in the ocean
Picture No. 12020756Sea turtle eating a detergent styrofoam cup. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020755Sea turtle eating a detergent plastic bottle. Plastic bags and a lot of other trash of rotting plastic drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020754Sea turtle swallowing a plastic bag much like a jellyfish that is one of its natural foods. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic trash drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020753Sea turtle eating a detergent styrofoam cup. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020749Sea lion, with nylon strings and piece of fishing net wrapped around his neck that caused him a deep wound. Hundreds of thousands of marine animals (fish, reptiles)
Picture No. 12020745Hawaiian monk seal, Neomonachus schauinslandi, playing with empty plastic bottle on a beach covered with plastic garbage. All this garbage was brought by the sea currents from afar; even
Picture No. 12020744Hermit crab using a small plastic football ball as a shell. The hermit crabs use empty shells to protect the soft part of the abdomen to make it inaccessible to predators
Picture No. 12479737Plastic waste on sorting conveyor belt in a recycling Date:
Picture No. 12479734Bale of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12479731Bales of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12020768Streaked spinefoot, Siganus javus. Several animals eating a piece of a plastic bottle. These fishes feed mostly on seaweeds that grow on the rocks but also eat jellyfishes
Picture No. 12020765Titan triggerfish, Balistoides viridescens, eating a plastic bottle. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020764Whale shark, Rhincodon typus, feeding in the midle of plastic bags and other platic garbage. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020761Plastic bag and a Mauve Stinger, Pelagia noctiluca, with a young drift fish. Contrast between a piece of hazardous waste and healthy nature. Concept image
Picture No. 12020762Six pack rings accompanied by a young horse mackerel. These fish as young people usually protect themselves from predators by hiding among the stinging tentacles of jellyfish
Picture No. 12020746California sea lion, Zalophus californianus, with nylon strings wrapped around his neck that caused him a deep wound. Hundreds of thousands of marine animals (fish, reptiles)
D-69417Opah, Lampris guttatus. It's a endothermic fish (warm-blooded), with a rete mirabile in its gill ti Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69416Bluntnose sixgill shark, Hexanchus griseus, eating bait. Can grow to 6 meters and is distributed by Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69415Fallow deer, Dama dama. Fawn. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth to their fawn Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69388Fallow deer, Dama dama. Female with fawn. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth t Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69339Fallow deer, Dama dama. Fawn suckling. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth to t Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69330Two-Headed Calf, embalmed. There are many occurrences of multi-headed animals. Survival to adulthood Date: 25-Sep-19
D-69329Two-Headed Calf, embalmed. There are many occurrences of multi-headed animals. Survival to adulthood Date: 25-Sep-19
Picture No. 12479741Employees of a waste facility on a conveyor belt Date:
Picture No. 12479740Employees of a waste facility on a conveyor belt Date:
Picture No. 12479739Manual sorting of plastic and metal waste in Date:
Picture No. 12479738Manual sorting of plastic and metal waste in Date:
Picture No. 12479736Bale of crushed PET bottles. Once collected, Date:
Picture No. 12479735Separation of plastics in a waste facility. Some Date:
Picture No. 12479733Bales of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12479732Bales of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12479730Bale of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12479729Bales of crushed PET bottles. The plastic bottles Date:
Picture No. 12479378Woman's hand showing small pieces of plastic Date:
Picture No. 12020763Whale shark, Rhincodon typus, feeding near plastic bags. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic garbage drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020760Concept image allusive to a blue planet invaded by plastic garbage. Plastic bag photographed with a fisheye lens against the surface
Picture No. 12020757Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage floating in the ocean
Picture No. 12020752Sea turtle swallowing a plastic bag much like a jellyfish that is one of its natural foods. Plastic bags and a lot of other plastic trash drift through oceans driven by wind and ocean currents
Picture No. 12020751Cape fur seal, Arctocephalus pusillus, playing with a plastic bottle underwater. Marine plastic garbage is carried by ocean currents far from its source; sometimes it comes from other continents
Picture No. 12020750Sea lion nibbling a plastic bottle underwater. Marine plastic garbage is carried by ocean currents far from its source; sometimes it comes from other continents situated on the other side of
Picture No. 12020748Young northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus, tangled in a nylon rope, and dragging grimly behind her a string of nets, cables, and fishing wires
Picture No. 12020747Sea lion, with nylon strings and piece of fishing net wrapped around his neck that caused him a deep wound. Hundreds of thousands of marine animals (fish, reptiles)