Animals
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Bobcat performs a long jump
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A Man Plays Fetch With a Beluga Whale
1:11
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Michael Jackson's Chimpanzee Bubbles Does the Moonwalk
0:36
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American tourist killed after an enraged bull elephant attacks a safari truck
0:38
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Bull Rams a Man Riding Motorbike
0:19
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Angry Out of Control Elephant Smashes Everything
0:58
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Brown Bear Cubs Playing With Mommy
1:42
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Young Bears Get Excited At Feeding Time
2:12
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Beluga whale saves an iPhone from the sea
0:20
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Owl Hunting At Night Swoops In And Picks Up a Bird
0:11
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Orangutan Gets a Drink of Water
3:22
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Grey Mongoose Kills a King Cobra
1:25
13
Dog Finds a New Best Friend
0:23
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Beautiful Rare Deep Sea Jellyfish
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Bear Cubs play with swing
1:09
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Game of Golf Interrupted by Hundreds of Kangaroos in Australia
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Baby Bear Cries Before Being Reunited with Mom
0:39
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Angry Leopard wants out of the Cage
0:28
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Small Blue Snake On a Red Rose
1:07
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Jaguar Cub Waves Its Paw
0:35
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Brown Bear Catching and Eating Salmon
0:49
22
Two Tigers Face Off at the Zoo
0:53
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A Buffalo Being Attacked by Lions is Saved by the Herd
0:53
Baboon Mother With Her Young Baby
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Tiger Cub Plays With A Dog
1:07
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Joey Inside Mother’s Pouch
1:01
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Alligator Eats A Turtle After Smashing It’s Shell
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Lost Bear Cub Cries Out For Mom
0:38
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Smart Bird Uses Bread as Bait to Catch Fish
1:09
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A Hummingbird Sits On Eggs In Her Nest
0:41
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Young Lions Play With Dad At The Zoo
3:11
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Buffalo Take Over The Road In Yellowstone
1:30
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A Cobra Attack has no Effect on a Mongoose
0:13
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Bison Calf Struggles to Keep Up With Mom in Deep Powder Snow
1:34
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A Bald Eagle Calls Out to Another Eagle
1:00
36
Rabbits Playing In The Yard
0:46
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Huge Moose Gets A Drink From The River
4:22
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A Great Grey Owl Watches For Prey At Dusk
1:19
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Moose Lick Road Salt Off of a Car
2:13
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Elephant charges 2 men in Kerala, India
0:18
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River Otters Love to Play on the Ice
1:23
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Grizzly Cubs Playing at Sunrise in Wyoming
3:37
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Bison Fight it Out in a Field
1:26
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Otters Tease an Annoyed Orangutan
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Wolf and Crows Munch on Elk in Yellowstone
2:42
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Young Fox Relaxing on the Ground
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Two Moose Battle it out in Wyoming
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Wyoming Residents Rescue Several Elk Trapped in Ice
1:40
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At least 13 killer whales are trapped in ice near northern Japan
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Mongoose Versus Snake Fights
2:08
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Bald Eagle Finds Lunch on the Beach
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Bullfrog chillin’ on the table
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Black Bears Take Over the Highway
1:07
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Hummingbirds of Montana
1:35
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Release of 2 captured angry Montana grizzly bears
2:39
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Bear Cubs Play on a Small Tree
1:55
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Nine lives for a cat that jumped from 5th floor fire In Chicago .
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Falling cat saved with American flag at Miami football game
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Kitty Loves Her Heated Blanket on a Cold Day
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4.2 magnitude Earthquake wakes up two snuggling cats in Riverside, CA
0:30

Baboon Mother With Her Young Baby

3 months ago
991

Baboon mother with her young baby

Baboons are primates comprising the genus Papio, one of the 23 genera of Old World monkeys, in the family Cercopithecidae. There are six species of baboon: the hamadryas baboon, the Guinea baboon, the olive baboon, the yellow baboon, the Kinda baboon and the chacma baboon. Each species is native to one of six areas of Africa and the hamadryas baboon is also native to part of the Arabian Peninsula.[2] Baboons are among the largest non-hominoid primates and have existed for at least two million years.

What are baboons?

They are some of the world’s largest monkeys. There are five species of the baboon — olive, yellow, chacma, Guinea, and sacred — scattered across various habitat in Africa and Arabia. The olive baboon is the most extensively distributed of the baboon family. The baboon, like other Old World monkeys, does not have a prehensile (gripping) tail — meaning their tails are not used as a hand — but they are still able to climb when necessary. They all have dog-like noses, powerful jaws, sharp canine teeth, and thick fur. Males have a longer mane around the neck, called a ruff.

Females typically give birth after a six-month gestation, usually to a single infant; twin baboons are rare and often do not survive. The young baboon weighs approximately 400 g and has a black epidermis when born.
The females tend to be the primary caretaker of the young, although several females will share the duties for all of their offspring. After about one year, the young animals are weaned. They reach sexual maturity in five to eight years. Baboon males leave their birth group, usually before they reach sexual maturity, whereas females are philopatric and stay in the same group their whole lives.
Baboons in captivity have been known to live up to 45 years, while in the wild their life expectancy is between 20 and 30 years

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