Home Actor Ronan Donovan HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers April 2020 Ronan Donovan Instagram - While many of us are used to the sight of a chimp eating a banana, it's not actually part of their natural diet. Bananas didn't even originate on the same continent where chimps live - Africa. Bananas are a Southeast Asia food that was brought to the Africa continent through trade in the last 2,000 years. This photo is of a wild male chimp, known as Araali to the researchers, belonging to the Bulindi chimpanzee, studied by Dr. McLennan (@bulindichimps), eating a banana in someone's garden in rural western Uganda. The second photo shows another male, named Jack, standing in a eucalyptus tree plantation (another noon native plant) and found a discarded bottle to play with. Not a good thing with how many diseases we share in common with chimps. Photo 3 shows the little strip of forest left where chimps live in this part of western Uganda. Learn more in the story but David Quammen (@davidquammen) and I for @natgeo - link in my bio. Call to action here is to donate $ to the @bulindichimps, link in bio. Thank you.

Ronan Donovan Instagram – While many of us are used to the sight of a chimp eating a banana, it’s not actually part of their natural diet. Bananas didn’t even originate on the same continent where chimps live – Africa. Bananas are a Southeast Asia food that was brought to the Africa continent through trade in the last 2,000 years. This photo is of a wild male chimp, known as Araali to the researchers, belonging to the Bulindi chimpanzee, studied by Dr. McLennan (@bulindichimps), eating a banana in someone’s garden in rural western Uganda. The second photo shows another male, named Jack, standing in a eucalyptus tree plantation (another noon native plant) and found a discarded bottle to play with. Not a good thing with how many diseases we share in common with chimps. Photo 3 shows the little strip of forest left where chimps live in this part of western Uganda. Learn more in the story but David Quammen (@davidquammen) and I for @natgeo – link in my bio. Call to action here is to donate $ to the @bulindichimps, link in bio. Thank you.

Ronan Donovan Instagram - While many of us are used to the sight of a chimp eating a banana, it's not actually part of their natural diet. Bananas didn't even originate on the same continent where chimps live - Africa. Bananas are a Southeast Asia food that was brought to the Africa continent through trade in the last 2,000 years. This photo is of a wild male chimp, known as Araali to the researchers, belonging to the Bulindi chimpanzee, studied by Dr. McLennan (@bulindichimps), eating a banana in someone's garden in rural western Uganda. The second photo shows another male, named Jack, standing in a eucalyptus tree plantation (another noon native plant) and found a discarded bottle to play with. Not a good thing with how many diseases we share in common with chimps. Photo 3 shows the little strip of forest left where chimps live in this part of western Uganda. Learn more in the story but David Quammen (@davidquammen) and I for @natgeo - link in my bio. Call to action here is to donate $ to the @bulindichimps, link in bio. Thank you.

Ronan Donovan Instagram – While many of us are used to the sight of a chimp eating a banana, it’s not actually part of their natural diet. Bananas didn’t even originate on the same continent where chimps live – Africa. Bananas are a Southeast Asia food that was brought to the Africa continent through trade in the last 2,000 years. This photo is of a wild male chimp, known as Araali to the researchers, belonging to the Bulindi chimpanzee, studied by Dr. McLennan (@bulindichimps), eating a banana in someone’s garden in rural western Uganda. The second photo shows another male, named Jack, standing in a eucalyptus tree plantation (another noon native plant) and found a discarded bottle to play with. Not a good thing with how many diseases we share in common with chimps. Photo 3 shows the little strip of forest left where chimps live in this part of western Uganda. Learn more in the story but David Quammen (@davidquammen) and I for @natgeo – link in my bio. Call to action here is to donate $ to the @bulindichimps, link in bio. Thank you. | Posted on 20/Nov/2019 21:52:12

Ronan Donovan Instagram – Today, March 21st, marks the 25 year anniversary of the first wolves released into the wilds of Yellowstone National Park. It took decades of hard work by a passionate group of Conservationists, NGOs and politicians to make this restoration effort possible. Thank you for your efforts. Under the bipartisan supported Endangered Species Act, the gray wolf became protected in the lower-48 in 1974. The loss of Wilderness and Wildthings was felt across the nation at that time and the gray wolf was the final piece to restore the Yellowstone Ecosystem to its historic glory – before Europeans and market hunters/trappers changed the West forever. Today, Yellowstone’s roughly 100 wolves represent one of the great restoration stories of the last century. I hope you all have the chance to one day hear a wild wolf pack howling in the distance. If you’re interested to learn more, there are dozens of books on the topic, but a few notable titles are : Decade of the Wolf, Of Wolves and Men, and American Wolf @yellowstonenps @nationalparkservice #wolves #wolf #mrblue #yellowstone #yellowstonenationalpark
Ronan Donovan Instagram – While many of us are used to the sight of a chimp eating a banana, it’s not actually part of their natural diet. Bananas didn’t even originate on the same continent where chimps live – Africa. Bananas are a Southeast Asia food that was brought to the Africa continent through trade in the last 2,000 years. This photo is of a wild male chimp, known as Araali to the researchers, belonging to the Bulindi chimpanzee, studied by Dr. McLennan (@bulindichimps), eating a banana in someone’s garden in rural western Uganda. The second photo shows another male, named Jack,  standing in a eucalyptus tree plantation (another noon native plant) and found a discarded bottle to play with. Not a good thing with how many diseases we share in common with chimps. Photo 3 shows the little strip of forest left where chimps live in this part of western Uganda. Learn more in the story but David Quammen (@davidquammen) and I for @natgeo – link in my bio. Call to action here is to donate $ to the @bulindichimps, link in bio. Thank you.

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