Michael Durham Photography

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  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-207.jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) using regurgitation to feed her young while nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    nesting_Flightless_cormorant_82510Is...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    nesting_Flightless_cormorant_82510Is...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_cormorant__82510IsB1-172.jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_cormorant__82510IsB1-156.jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_cormorant__82510IsB1-139.jpg
  • whirligig beetles, or Gyrinidae beetles, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-74.jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-16.jpg
  • A night moth (Noctuoidea) camouflaged as a twig on a tree in Central Texas.
    camouflaged_insect_32109clb-57.jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) using regurgitation to feed her young while nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) using regurgitation to feed her young while nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    nesting_Flightless_cormorant_82510Is...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_cormorant__82510IsB1-142.jpg
  • whirligig beetles, or Gyrinidae beetles, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-8.jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-53.jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-47.jpg
  • whirligig beetles, or Gyrinidae beetles, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-388.jpg
  • whirligig beetles, or Gyrinidae beetles, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-187.jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-140.jpg
  • whirligig beetles, or Gyrinidae beetles, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-104.jpg
  • A night moth (Noctuoidea) camouflaged as a twig on a tree in Central Texas.
    camouflaged_insect_32109clb-45.jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    Flightless_Cormorant_nest_82510IsB1-...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    nesting_Flightless_cormorant_82510Is...jpg
  • Flightless cormorant (Phalacrocorax harrisi) nesting on Isabela Island, Galapagos Archipelago - Ecuador.
    nesting_Flightless_cormorant_82510Is...jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-228.jpg
  • A whirligig beetle, or Gyrinidae beetle, (Dineutus sp) swimming in water. Central Texas.
    whirligig_beetle_32509gyd-156.jpg
  • A Northern Pygmy Owl (Glaucidium gnoma) showing false eyes on the back of its head near the Clackamas River in the Mount Hood National Forest, Oregon. It is believed the
    Pygmy_Owl-51913pO.jpg
  • A Northern Pygmy Owl (Glaucidium gnoma) showing the false eyes on the back of its head. Photographed near the Clackamas River in the Mount Hood National Forest, Oregon.
    northern-pygmy-owl-21913Ol-362.jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_7110...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_7110CrtsM-103.jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_7110CrtsM-101.jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • American pika (Ochotona princeps) in Craters of The Moon National Monument. Pikas at Craters of the Moon are different in size, color, and behavior than their mountain cousins. They are much darker and smaller than mountain pika. During the warmest summer months, they are most active at dawn and at dusk rather than during the day like in the mountains. Here they make their home in the lava fields using the broken lava for shelter.
    American_pika_Ochotona_princeps_6291...jpg
  • A mountain goat kid (Oremanos americanus), not more than two or three days old, already has substantial ability to negogiate the rough terrain of Glacier National Park, Montana.
    mt_goat_kid_Mt_goat_MDurham424_16.jpg
  • The Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater. The Kentucky Cave Shrimp was included on the IUCN Red List as Endangered in 1994. Photographed (via permit) near the river Styx in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky.
    cave_shrimp-91815kcs-209.jpg
  • The Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater. The Kentucky Cave Shrimp was included on the IUCN Red List as Endangered in 1994. Photographed (via permit) near the river Styx in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky.
    cave_shrimp-91815kcs-203.jpg
  • A swimming Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) near the river Styx in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. The Kentucky Cave Shrimp is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater. The Kentucky Cave Shrimp was included on the IUCN Red List as Endangered in 1994. Photographed (via permit) near the river Styx in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky.
    cave_shrimp-91815kcs-161-2.jpg
  • The Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater. The Kentucky Cave Shrimp was included on the IUCN Red List as Endangered in 1994. Photographed (via permit) near the river Styx in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky.
    cave_shrimp-91815kcs-247_E16a.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed on a high ridge at sunset. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.<br />
Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed on a high ridge at sunset. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    Mountain_Mahogany_6506MH4.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.<br />
Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    tree_at_night_6506MH4_N.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.<br />
Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    tree_at_night_6506MH3.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.<br />
Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    tree_at_night_6506MH2_N.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.<br />
Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge with colored lights. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    tree_at_night_6506MH1_N.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    Mountain_Mahogany_Cercocarpus_ledifo...jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed on a high ridge. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    Mountain_Mahogany_6506MH2.jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    Mountain_Mahogany_Cercocarpus_ledifo...jpg
  • Mountain Mahogany (Cercocarpus ledifolius) photographed at night on a high ridge. Eden Bench, Wallowa County Oregon.<br />
This shrub is adapted to survive on rocky slopes, ridges and canyons in mostly dry habitats. Its wood is so dense that it sinks in water.
    Mountain_Mahogany_Cercocarpus_ledifo...jpg
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