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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment

The week in wildlife - in pictures

Week in wildlife: Giant Pandas Thrive In Chengdu Research Sanctuary
A giant panda eats bamboo shoots at the giant panda research base in Chengdu, China. Giant pandas are to return to the UK for the first time in 17 years after an agreement was signed with China this week Photograph: David Silverman/Getty Images
Week in wildlife: Thousands Of Trees Felled To Halt Spread Of Sudden Oak Death
Larch trees that are being felled at the National Trust's Staple plantation on the Quantock Hills near Minehead, England. Thousands of infected larch trees are being felled at the woodland to try to halt the spread of the deadly disease known as sudden oak death. The airborne disease, originally from the US and which can jump species, is spreading so fast some commentators are calling it the 'foot and mouth' of trees Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
Week in wildlife: Brisbane Floods Worsen As Death Toll Rises
Wallabies find dry ground after Charlie's Creek reached its peak for a second time in January in Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia. Sixteen people have been confirmed dead and 53 are still missing after devastating floods in the Lockyer valley. Evacuations took place this week in several towns and suburbs in and around the state capital of Brisbane as the waters surged downstream. The Queensland premier, Anna Bligh, referred to the flood crisis as the worst natural disaster the state had experienced and warned that clean-up and rebuilding costs could reach an estimated A$5bn (£3.1bn) Photograph: Getty Images/Getty Images
week in wildlife: Baby anteater
An anteater baby on its mother's back at the Santa Fe zoo in Medellin, Colombia. The baby was born on 6 January and is the first born in captivity on the Colombian city's zoo Photograph: Luis Eduardo Noriega/EPA
Week in wildlife: A jay picks a congealed lard near the village of Khatenchitsy
A jay picks at congealed lard in Belarus Photograph: Tatyana Zenkovich/EPA
Week in wildlife: Bicyclus anynana butterflies mating
Bicyclus anynana butterflies mating. Left: dry season female. Right: wet season male. The way male and female butterflies relate to one another depends on the weather they experience as they mature to adults Photograph: Courtesy of William Piel & Antonia Monteiro
Week in wildlife: Corals
Elegance coral (Catalaphyllia jardinae). Elegance coral has a symbiotic relationship with zooxanthellae, an algae that lives within the tissue of coral and provides energy to the coral. Elegance coral can also obtain food by catching small prey with its tentacles to supplement its diet. Conservationists this week unveiled plans to save key coral species from extinction Photograph: Tim Wijgerde/ZSL
Week in wildlife: King penguin
A king penguin with a tracking band on its flipper walking among other adults and juveniles on the sub-Antarctic island of Crozet. Penguin researchers put metal bands on the seabirds' flippers to track them. But the decade-long survival rate for banded king penguins is 16% lower than penguins who don't have metal trackers, according to a new study published in the journal Nature Photograph: Benoit Gineste/AP
Week in wildlife: Orphan spider monkey, Serere Sanctuary, Serere, Bolivia - Dec 2010
Pepe the spider monkey, pictured here at an animal sanctuary in the heart of the Amazon basin in Bolivia, was orphaned at three days old. His mother was killed by poachers who hunt the species for their meat, which is considered a delicacy Photograph: Roy Mangersnes/Rex Features
Week in wildlife: The body of a baby elephant drowned in floods, Sri Lanka
The body of a baby elephant drowned in heavy flood waters hangs from a tree on 13 January 2011 in the north-central Sri Lankan region of Habarana. Local officials believe the baby elephant may have drowned three days earlier when flood waters rose more than 18 feet from the Gal Oya River. Heavy monsoon rains have driven more than 1 million people out of their homes in the central, north-central and eastern regions of Sri Lanka in the past week Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images
Week in wildlife: Black-bird die-off Investigation
The carcass of a red-winged blackbird from Beebe, Arkansas, is examined by a US Geological Survey wildlife pathologist. Hundreds of blackbirds fell from sky over Louisiana, days after similar phenomenon in neighbouring Arkansas Photograph: USGS
Frogs of Haiti: Hispaniola Crowned Frog
The rediscovered hispaniola crowned frog – last seen in 1991, Eleutherodactylus corona, a critically endangered species from the Massif de la Hotte, Haiti Photograph: Robin Moore/iLCP/CI
Week in wildlife: one of world's rarest wild cats spotted in Malaysian Borneo
One of the world's rarest wild cats spotted in Malaysian Borneo. The Bornean bay cat, a long-tailed reddish or grey feline the size of a large domestic cat, was sighted in the northern highlands of Malaysia's Sarawak state, the forest department said Photograph: Forest Department Sarawak, Itto/AFP/Getty Images
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