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Snow Leopard or Ounce, uncia uncia, Adult leaping on Snow
Chipmunk sitting on rock with hands to mouth and mouth open in northern Colorado, in western USA of North America. Nearest town is Walden, Colorado.
Pika sitting on large rock with grasses in his mouth
A captive Snow Leopard from below. This is on a hillside rock wall in the autumn. At a game farm in Montana, with captive animals in natural settings. Property released.
Least Weasel - Mustela Nivalis - a small predatory mammal with brown white fur, weasel with hunted sand lizard returns to the burrow with prey, stony shore of the lake.
A young American red squirrel eating a spruce cone in the Sitka National Historic Park in Sitka, Alaska.
(Tamias amoenus) The Yellow Pine Chipmunk has defined black and white stripes on its body.  These animals live above 6000 feet in elevation in the Cascade Range.  They are true hibernators.
Endemic Gallot's lizard of Tenerife Gallotia galloti: prehistoric reptiles.
Squirrel eating flower on top of the mountain, looking at the view.
marmot at beautiful blackcomb mountains in Canada
This short-tailed weasel was busy on a Spring day in Yellowstone collecting pine cones in an area with fallen trees. The ermine stopped for a short moment to check me out from a distance. He still had his white coat from the Winter as it was very early in Spring. This is a very rare animal to see.
The Rock Squirrel (Otospermophilus variegatus) is a medium sized ground squirrel but can also be seen climbing boulders, rocks and trees. It is typically 8-10 inches long, with a bushy tail up to 8 inches long. Rock squirrels are grayish-brown, with some patches of cinnamon color.  They have a light-colored ring around their eyes and pointed ears that project well above their heads.  In the northern reach of their habitat, rock squirrels hibernate during the colder months of the year. In southern areas, rock squirrels may not hibernate at all.  These squirrels are diurnal animals that spend their days burrowed underground or hiding beneath bushes and rocks, only emerging to forage for food or to find mates.  The rock squirrel is omnivorous with its diet consisting mostly of leaves, stems and seeds.  They may also eat some insects and other small animals.  This rock squirrel was photographed on Campbell Mesa in the Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
a Marten sits in a tree licking his lips near the Madison River in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Rock Squirrel forages along the south rim of the Grand Canyon. A type of large ground squirrel that can be up to 21 inches long.
A selective of a stoat (Mustela erminea) from the fir branches in Yellowstone National Park
Chipmunk in the Whistler alpine. Wild animals in Whistler, Canada.
Bent's Spiny-Tailed LIzard, uromastyx benti, Adult standing on Stone
Amazing landscape of Mount Rainier National Park in summer season, Washington - USA
Pine Marten Banff National Park Kanada
A Snow Leopard staring down from above. This is on a hillside rock wall in the autumn. A game farm in Montana, with animals in natural settings. Property released. Captive.
One Chipmunk standing on a large rock eating blue flowers in the Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.
The Golden-Mantled Ground Squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis) is a type of squirrel found in the mountainous areas of western North America. Because of its stripes and cheek pouches the Golden-Mantled Ground Squirrel is often thought of as a chipmunk. It is considerably larger than the chipmunk and lacks facial stripes. This Golden Mantled Ground Squirrel was photographed while feeding in a meadow of lupine near the Paradise River in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State, USA.
A close-up of a chipmunk standing on a rock with a blurred background in a natural outdoor setting.
Colorful Greater Earless lizard suns himself on a rock in Big Bend national park Texas.
Pika (Ochotona Daurica). Photographed by acclaimed wildlife photographer and writer, Dr. William J. Weber.
The Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis) is a commonly observed rodent in Yellowstone although it's often mistaken for a large chipmunk. Unlike chipmunks, it lacks facial stripes.
Grand Canyon USA
Chipmunk on root.
RINGTAIL OR RING-TAILED CAT bassariscus astutus, ADULT STANDING ON ROCKS, MONTANA
a Lizard soaks up the sun near Gerlach, Nevada
Free Images: "bestof:...Wildlife Superpowers Exhibits" highlight the difficult task species have surviving in their sub-alpine habitat, especially in the face of a changing"
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