logging in or signing up Great Migrations Nubiagroup Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1343 Category: Travel/ Places.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: November 05, 2010 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description PPS by Nubia_group - you can find the link to download this presentation on my blog here : http://nubiagroup-powerpoint-collection.blogspot.com/ Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript PowerPoint Presentation: A wildebeest herd stampedes across the dusty plains of Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. Every year, wildebeests travel some 1,800 miles across equatorial East Africa in a race toward rain and the green it engenders. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manuj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Wildebeests, Kenya - Photograph by Murray Macdonald,PowerPoint Presentation: Going to sea on the Antarctic Peninsula, Gentoo penguins line up and quickly dive in together. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: To the walrus, ice is life. An oxygen-breathing marine mammal, it relies on the ice as a place to rest, to give birth, to nurse and to migrate. And with global warming, the ice is disappearing. Their annual migration is becoming a race against time and distance, depth and disaster. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Elephant Seals and King Penguins - Photograph by Paul Nicklen,PowerPoint Presentation: A zebra calf stays close to its mother for months, recognizing her by voice, smell and pattern of stripes. (© National Geographic/Marc Moritsch)PowerPoint Presentation: It takes zebras anywhere from 10 to 20 days to cross the roughly 150-mile mosaic of savanna grassland and woodland that lies between the Okavanga River in the Kalahari desert and the brutal salt pans of the Makgadikgadi. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manoj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Jellyfish, Palau - Photograph courtesy National Geographic Television - Golden jellyfish of Palau receive their namesake color from algae-like, single-celled organisms named zooxanthellae, which live within jellyfish and provide it with the energy required for life. They follow the sun in a daily migration that feeds their passengers and ensures their own survival.PowerPoint Presentation: A male wandering albatross displays its 11-foot wingspan to a female on South Georgia Island. The courtship ritual renews their pair bond after months of roaming the Southern Ocean. (© National Geographic/Frans Lanting)PowerPoint Presentation: Bellowing elephant seal bulls - weighing up to four tons and as much as 15 feet long - are doing more than boasting. Their battles are often vicious, and opponents may be severely injured. The top winner becomes the colony's "beachmaster." (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Spawning salmon dominate traffic in the Ozernaya River on the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia. (© National Geographic/Randy Olson)PowerPoint Presentation: White Pelicans, Mississippi - Photograph by Annie Griffiths - Immense flocks of white pelicans funnel through the Mississippi Flyway every day during the birds' twice-yearly travels between wintering and breeding grounds.PowerPoint Presentation: A sperm whale pod with a large calf migrates offshore of the Azores Islands in the eastern Atlantic. (© National Geographic/Hiroya Minakuchi/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: Bald eagles migrate along the Mississippi corridor in the spring, toward breeding grounds in the northern United States and Canada, finding plentiful food resources, and sometimes joined in feasting by common ravens. (© National Geographic/Jim Brandenburg/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: White-eared kob race across the plains of Southern Sudan. (© National Geographic/George Steinmetz)PowerPoint Presentation: Elephant seals migrate to the Falklands, sub-Antarctic islands circled by relentless ocean winds and currents, to breed. The youngsters receive careful attention from their mothers. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Army ants move to an almost unfathomable instinct, their seething colonies of 500,000 to two million individuals so finely tuned that they operate as if they are the cells of a single organism. (© National Geographic/Mark Moffett/Minden PicturesPowerPoint Presentation: A closer view of the head and mandibles of an Army ant. The workers' duties include carrying the colony's pre-adult pupae while migrating. (© National Geographic/Christian Ziegler/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: After wintering as far from the Falklands as South Africa, black-browed albatrosses form a colony of their own, and birds of a breeding pair groom each other's neck feathers. A pair's single chick may not survive. (© National Geographic/Frans Lanting)PowerPoint Presentation: Off the coast of western Australia, small fish cluster around a whale shark, using it as shelter from predators. (© National Geographic/Brian Skerry)PowerPoint Presentation: Whale Shark, Australia - Photograph by Brian SkerryPowerPoint Presentation: Monarch Butterflies, Mexico - Photograph by Joel Sartore,PowerPoint Presentation: Monarch butterflies clump by the millions on oyamel trees in Mexican forests. But before migrating northward in the spring, the butterflies drop from the trees and begin a giant mating spree. (© National Geographic/Stephanie Atlas)PowerPoint Presentation: A polar bear stands on sea ice. The ice is critical to its habitat, and is decreasing in the warming Arctic. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Mali elephants must travel in a perpetual migration across the arid Sahel region in search of food and water. Their yearly 300-mile trek is the longest known elephant migration. As the climate becomes more fickle and human demands on land and water increase, these desert nomads face an ever more uncertain fate. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manoj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Samburu Elephants, Kenya - Photograph by Michael NicholsPowerPoint Presentation: A female Bornean orangutan carries her one-year-old offspring to safety. Orangutans are always after food. Their lives revolve around the search for it. Remarkably, they seem to memorize an internal guide that leads them back to trees just at the time they are in fruit. (© National Geographic/Tim Laman)PowerPoint Presentation: During their weeklong migration, the red crabs of Christmas Island must climb down precipitous cliffs, where many fall and die before reaching their destination on the shore. (© National Geographic/David Hamlin)PowerPoint Presentation: Red Crabs, Christmas Island - Photograph courtesy National Geographic TelevisionPowerPoint Presentation: Plains zebras typically accompany the wildebeest - danger lurks if the big equines become separated from the herd. (© National Geographic/Mitsuaki Iwago/ Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: An advancing white shark typically means doom for any large sea mammal it approaches, even for huge sea elephants off Guadalupe Island off Mexico's Pacific coast. (© National Geographic/Mauricio Handler)PowerPoint Presentation: Great White Shark - Photograph by David CaraviasPowerPoint Presentation: Rangeland fences are an omnipresent barrier to the pronghorn, which is not designed for leaping high. When it tries to squeeze under, it can be ensnared in a barbed wire death trap. (© National Geographic/Joe Riis)PowerPoint Presentation: Pronghorn, Wyoming - Photograph by Joe RiisPowerPoint Presentation: Dusk silhouettes a pronghorn at the Heart Mountain National Antelope Refuge in Oregon. (© National Geographic/Michael Durham/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: A proboscis monkey, her infant holding tightly, makes a flying leap in the Bornean forest. (© National Geographic/Tim Laman)PowerPoint Presentation: With a whoosh of wings and a splash, Canada geese pause, feed, rest, and then take off to resume their migration toward northern breeding grounds. (© National Geographic/Thomas Kitchin & Victoria Hurst/Getty Images)PowerPoint Presentation: Zebras, Botswana - Photograph by Robert B. HaasPowerPoint Presentation: Snow Geese, New Mexico - Photograph by Ralph Lee HopkinsPowerPoint Presentation: Flamingos, Yucatán Peninsula - Photograph by Robert B. HaasPowerPoint Presentation: Mexican Free-Tailed Bats, Texas - Photograph by Joel SartorePowerPoint Presentation: Black-Browed Albatrosses, Falkland IslandsPowerPoint Presentation: Rockhopper Penguins, Argentina - Photograph by Tomas Kotouc,PowerPoint Presentation: Bison, Kansas - Photograph by Joel Sartore,PowerPoint Presentation: Flamingos, Kenya - Photograph by Gina Pflegervu,PowerPoint Presentation: A presentation by Nubia Nubia_group@yahoo.fr http://nubiagroup-powerpoint-collection.blogspot.com/ STOP PIRACY ! This presentation is for personnal use only- do not edit it or change it in anyway – respect the efforts and credits - thanks You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
Great Migrations Nubiagroup Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1343 Category: Travel/ Places.. License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: November 05, 2010 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description PPS by Nubia_group - you can find the link to download this presentation on my blog here : http://nubiagroup-powerpoint-collection.blogspot.com/ Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript PowerPoint Presentation: A wildebeest herd stampedes across the dusty plains of Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. Every year, wildebeests travel some 1,800 miles across equatorial East Africa in a race toward rain and the green it engenders. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manuj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Wildebeests, Kenya - Photograph by Murray Macdonald,PowerPoint Presentation: Going to sea on the Antarctic Peninsula, Gentoo penguins line up and quickly dive in together. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: To the walrus, ice is life. An oxygen-breathing marine mammal, it relies on the ice as a place to rest, to give birth, to nurse and to migrate. And with global warming, the ice is disappearing. Their annual migration is becoming a race against time and distance, depth and disaster. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Elephant Seals and King Penguins - Photograph by Paul Nicklen,PowerPoint Presentation: A zebra calf stays close to its mother for months, recognizing her by voice, smell and pattern of stripes. (© National Geographic/Marc Moritsch)PowerPoint Presentation: It takes zebras anywhere from 10 to 20 days to cross the roughly 150-mile mosaic of savanna grassland and woodland that lies between the Okavanga River in the Kalahari desert and the brutal salt pans of the Makgadikgadi. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manoj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Jellyfish, Palau - Photograph courtesy National Geographic Television - Golden jellyfish of Palau receive their namesake color from algae-like, single-celled organisms named zooxanthellae, which live within jellyfish and provide it with the energy required for life. They follow the sun in a daily migration that feeds their passengers and ensures their own survival.PowerPoint Presentation: A male wandering albatross displays its 11-foot wingspan to a female on South Georgia Island. The courtship ritual renews their pair bond after months of roaming the Southern Ocean. (© National Geographic/Frans Lanting)PowerPoint Presentation: Bellowing elephant seal bulls - weighing up to four tons and as much as 15 feet long - are doing more than boasting. Their battles are often vicious, and opponents may be severely injured. The top winner becomes the colony's "beachmaster." (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Spawning salmon dominate traffic in the Ozernaya River on the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia. (© National Geographic/Randy Olson)PowerPoint Presentation: White Pelicans, Mississippi - Photograph by Annie Griffiths - Immense flocks of white pelicans funnel through the Mississippi Flyway every day during the birds' twice-yearly travels between wintering and breeding grounds.PowerPoint Presentation: A sperm whale pod with a large calf migrates offshore of the Azores Islands in the eastern Atlantic. (© National Geographic/Hiroya Minakuchi/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: Bald eagles migrate along the Mississippi corridor in the spring, toward breeding grounds in the northern United States and Canada, finding plentiful food resources, and sometimes joined in feasting by common ravens. (© National Geographic/Jim Brandenburg/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: White-eared kob race across the plains of Southern Sudan. (© National Geographic/George Steinmetz)PowerPoint Presentation: Elephant seals migrate to the Falklands, sub-Antarctic islands circled by relentless ocean winds and currents, to breed. The youngsters receive careful attention from their mothers. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Army ants move to an almost unfathomable instinct, their seething colonies of 500,000 to two million individuals so finely tuned that they operate as if they are the cells of a single organism. (© National Geographic/Mark Moffett/Minden PicturesPowerPoint Presentation: A closer view of the head and mandibles of an Army ant. The workers' duties include carrying the colony's pre-adult pupae while migrating. (© National Geographic/Christian Ziegler/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: After wintering as far from the Falklands as South Africa, black-browed albatrosses form a colony of their own, and birds of a breeding pair groom each other's neck feathers. A pair's single chick may not survive. (© National Geographic/Frans Lanting)PowerPoint Presentation: Off the coast of western Australia, small fish cluster around a whale shark, using it as shelter from predators. (© National Geographic/Brian Skerry)PowerPoint Presentation: Whale Shark, Australia - Photograph by Brian SkerryPowerPoint Presentation: Monarch Butterflies, Mexico - Photograph by Joel Sartore,PowerPoint Presentation: Monarch butterflies clump by the millions on oyamel trees in Mexican forests. But before migrating northward in the spring, the butterflies drop from the trees and begin a giant mating spree. (© National Geographic/Stephanie Atlas)PowerPoint Presentation: A polar bear stands on sea ice. The ice is critical to its habitat, and is decreasing in the warming Arctic. (© National Geographic/Paul Nicklen)PowerPoint Presentation: Mali elephants must travel in a perpetual migration across the arid Sahel region in search of food and water. Their yearly 300-mile trek is the longest known elephant migration. As the climate becomes more fickle and human demands on land and water increase, these desert nomads face an ever more uncertain fate. (© National Geographic/Anup & Manoj Shah)PowerPoint Presentation: Samburu Elephants, Kenya - Photograph by Michael NicholsPowerPoint Presentation: A female Bornean orangutan carries her one-year-old offspring to safety. Orangutans are always after food. Their lives revolve around the search for it. Remarkably, they seem to memorize an internal guide that leads them back to trees just at the time they are in fruit. (© National Geographic/Tim Laman)PowerPoint Presentation: During their weeklong migration, the red crabs of Christmas Island must climb down precipitous cliffs, where many fall and die before reaching their destination on the shore. (© National Geographic/David Hamlin)PowerPoint Presentation: Red Crabs, Christmas Island - Photograph courtesy National Geographic TelevisionPowerPoint Presentation: Plains zebras typically accompany the wildebeest - danger lurks if the big equines become separated from the herd. (© National Geographic/Mitsuaki Iwago/ Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: An advancing white shark typically means doom for any large sea mammal it approaches, even for huge sea elephants off Guadalupe Island off Mexico's Pacific coast. (© National Geographic/Mauricio Handler)PowerPoint Presentation: Great White Shark - Photograph by David CaraviasPowerPoint Presentation: Rangeland fences are an omnipresent barrier to the pronghorn, which is not designed for leaping high. When it tries to squeeze under, it can be ensnared in a barbed wire death trap. (© National Geographic/Joe Riis)PowerPoint Presentation: Pronghorn, Wyoming - Photograph by Joe RiisPowerPoint Presentation: Dusk silhouettes a pronghorn at the Heart Mountain National Antelope Refuge in Oregon. (© National Geographic/Michael Durham/Minden Pictures)PowerPoint Presentation: A proboscis monkey, her infant holding tightly, makes a flying leap in the Bornean forest. (© National Geographic/Tim Laman)PowerPoint Presentation: With a whoosh of wings and a splash, Canada geese pause, feed, rest, and then take off to resume their migration toward northern breeding grounds. (© National Geographic/Thomas Kitchin & Victoria Hurst/Getty Images)PowerPoint Presentation: Zebras, Botswana - Photograph by Robert B. HaasPowerPoint Presentation: Snow Geese, New Mexico - Photograph by Ralph Lee HopkinsPowerPoint Presentation: Flamingos, Yucatán Peninsula - Photograph by Robert B. HaasPowerPoint Presentation: Mexican Free-Tailed Bats, Texas - Photograph by Joel SartorePowerPoint Presentation: Black-Browed Albatrosses, Falkland IslandsPowerPoint Presentation: Rockhopper Penguins, Argentina - Photograph by Tomas Kotouc,PowerPoint Presentation: Bison, Kansas - Photograph by Joel Sartore,PowerPoint Presentation: Flamingos, Kenya - Photograph by Gina Pflegervu,PowerPoint Presentation: A presentation by Nubia Nubia_group@yahoo.fr http://nubiagroup-powerpoint-collection.blogspot.com/ STOP PIRACY ! This presentation is for personnal use only- do not edit it or change it in anyway – respect the efforts and credits - thanks