Michael Durham Photography

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Video
  • Latest
  • Instagram
  • Lightbox
  • About
  • Contact

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 27 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-427-Edit.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-392.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at dusk in Central Oregon. Note the red band on the wing. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-322.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-393-Edit.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-426-Edit.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-343-Edit.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at dusk   in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-324.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at dusk   in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-315.jpg
  • Bat (myotis sp) flying into a cave at night in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    Cave_Bat_08-17-2019hgfV4-355.jpg
  • Bats flying around a cave at dusk in Central Oregon. High resolution composite, stitched image.
    bat_cave_07-25-2019-365-Pano-Edit.jpg
  • Bats flying into a cave in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    cave_bat_flying_07-25-2019Sc-174.jpg
  • Bats flying into a cave in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    cave_bat_flying_07-25-2019Sc-192.jpg
  • Bats flying into a cave in Central Oregon. © Michael Durham
    cave_bat_flying_07-25-2019Sc-141.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein.
    bracken_cave_92408TTb-145.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein.
    bracken_cave_92408TTb-137.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein.
    bracken_cave_92408TTb-133.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein.
    bracken_cave_92408TTb-155.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein.
    bracken_cave_92408TTb-132.jpg
  • Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) emerge from Bracken Cave at dusk.  Bracken Cave is currently estimated to have a colony of more than 20 million bats, making it the single largest concentration of mammals in the world. Bracken Cave is a owned and managed by Bat Conservation International, and access to the cave is restricted to protect the habitat of the bats residing therein. This image is stitched together from multiple exposures.
    bracken_cave_90908BrKc-132.jpg
  • A Mexican Brown Bat, also called a Cave Myotis (Myotis velifer) flying into a limestone cave, South Texas.
    cave_myotis_92408TTb-634.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-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
  • 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
  • A adit of the abandoned  'Falling Man' gold mine in the Coleville National Forest, Washington. This mine hosts townsend's big-eared bats (Corynorhinus townsendii) during their long winter hibernaton. The pine cones and other organic debris were brought into the mine by woodrats.
    abandoned_mine_103007FMM-9.jpg
  • A adit of the abandoned  'Falling Man' gold mine in the Coleville National Forest, Washington. This mine hosts townsend's big-eared bats (Corynorhinus townsendii) during their long winter hibernaton. The pine cones and other organic debris were brought into the mine by woodrats.
    abandoned_mine_103007FMM-15-Edit.jpg
  • A adit of the abandoned  'Falling Man' gold mine in the Coleville National Forest, Washington. This mine hosts townsend's big-eared bats (Corynorhinus townsendii) during their long winter hibernaton.
    abandoned_mine_103007FMM-11.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x