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Green monkey of St. Kitts - Mammals - Photo (JPG)


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Home > Fauna > Mammals
Green monkey of St. Kitts
During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination.

Green monkey of St. Kitts During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination. introduced species exotic species animal disease zoonoses water pollution St. Kitts Caribbean

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Green monkey of St. Kitts
During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination.
Large doe crossing road View through my windshield of doe that just crossed the road right in front of my car, and then stopped. Odocoileus virginianus mammal pest species road hazard overpopulation overgrazing White-tailed deer family Two does and three fawns return to the pine woods Odocoileus virginianus mammal pest species road hazard overpopulation overgrazing Green monkey of St. Kitts During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination. introduced species exotic species animal disease zoonoses water pollution St. Kitts Caribbean Green monkey of St. Kitts During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination. introduced species exotic species animal disease zoonoses water pollution St. Kitts Caribbean Free range cow drinks from sugar cane boiling pot. Remnants from the sugar cane plantation era, these boiling pots for sugar production now serve as watering troughs for cattle. livestock agriculture St. Kitts Caribbean Sheep Sheep   sheep farm animals animal husbandry agriculture farming wool shearing
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File information
Filename:iil-ian-jh-0086.jpg
Album name:hawkey / Mammals
Keywords:introduced species exotic species animal disease zoonoses water pollution St. Kitts Caribbean
Author's Name:Jane Hawkey
Author's Company:IAN, UMCES
Date image was created (MM/DD/YYYY):01/07/2008
Media Type (Photo, Satellite Image, Vector Graphic, Map, Animation, Video):Photo
File Size:2666 KB
Date added:Apr 21, 2008
Dimensions:2816 x 2112 pixels
Displayed:101 times
Downloaded:0 times (Details)
Image Description:During the 17th century, African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) were brought to the island of St Kitts, West Indies from Africa and are now considered an evolutionarily separate species. While enjoyed by tourists, their large numbers can cause problems with habitat destruction and possible water contamination.
Color Space:sRGB
Components Configuration:YCbCr
Compressed Bits Per Pixel:2
Contrast:0
Customer Render:0
Date Time:2008:04:21 10:17:35
DateTime Original:2008:01:07 03:22:52
DateTime digitized:2008:01:07 03:22:52
Digital Zoom Ratio:0
Exif Image Height:2112 pixels
Exif Image Width:2816 pixels
Exif Interoperability Offset:1316
Exif Offset:680
Exif Version:version 2.2
Exposure Bias:0 EV
Exposure Mode:0
Exposure Program:Program
Exposure Time:1/113 sec
FNumber:f 3.5
File Source:Digital Still Camera
Flash:No Flash
Flash Pix Version:version 1
Focal length:63.3 mm
Gain Control:0
ISO:50
Light Source:Unknown or Auto
Make:NIKON
Max Aperture:f 3.5
Metering Mode:Multi-Segment
Model:COOLPIX S4
Orientation:Normal (O deg)
Resolution Unit:Inch
Saturation:0
Scene Capture Mode:1
Scene Type:Directly Photographed
Sharpness:0
Software:Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows
White Balance:0
X Resolution:300
Y Resolution:300
YCbCrPositioning:Datum Point
IPTC Title:Green monkey of St. Kitts
IPTC Copyright:Copyright to the photographer. Free for any use if appropriate credit is reproduced with the image.
IPTC Keywords:introduced species exotic species animal disease zoonoses water pollution St. Kitts Caribbean
URL:http://ian.umces.edu/imagelibrary/displayimage-2208.html
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