Aktuális sajtó tartalmak és illusztrációs fotók

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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. In the early morning, fog covers the landscape along the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. The city of Frankfurt (Oder) can be seen in the background. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Manschnow, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. Two brown hares (Lepus europaeus) are out and about in a field in the Oderbruch in the early morning. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Lebus, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. The sunrise shines through the morning mist over the landscape on the German-Polish border river Oder in eastern Brandenburg. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Manschnow, Germany. 17th Mar, 2026. A brown hare (Lepus europaeus) can be seen in the early morning in a field in the Oderbruch. Credit: Patrick Pleul/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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UK weather, 16 March 2026: In a London garden a goldfinch perches on a stalk with a seed head in it's beak. Leaving last year's stalks standing in a wildflower patch attracts small birds looking for food. The cold weather is set to continue this week, making reliable food sources such as feeders and last year's seed heads important to small birds' survival. Credit: Anna Watson/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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UK weather, 16 March 2026: A goldfinch perches in a rowan sapling in a London garden. Nearby there are seed heads in a wildflower patch, which attracts wild birds looking for food. The cold weather is set to continue this week, making reliable food sources such as feeders and last year's seed heads important to small birds' survival. Credit: Anna Watson/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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UK weather, 16 March 2026: A goldfinch perches in a rowan sapling in a London garden. Nearby there are seed heads in a wildflower patch, which attracts wild birds looking for food. The cold weather is set to continue this week, making reliable food sources such as feeders and last year's seed heads important to small birds' survival. Credit: Anna Watson/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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UK weather, 16 March 2026: a pregnant fox vixen rests briefly on the lawn of a London garden and grooms her tail. Having conceived in January her cubs are expected later this month, when hopefully they will benefit from milder weather. Credit: Anna Watson/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Konik ponies at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the-stock-foto
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Roe deer at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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Roe deer at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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A reed bunting at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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A reed bunting at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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A little owl perches on a log pile at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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A little owl perches on a log pile at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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A grey heron at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the climate crisis. In 2025, Wicken Fen became the first site in the UK to record 10,000 different species.-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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Konik ponies at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the-stock-foto
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Konik ponies sparring as the breeding season begins at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce e-stock-foto
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A resident walks inside the Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden next to blooming tulip beds on a sunny spring day in Srinagar. The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden was thrown open to the public on Monday by Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory Omar Abdullah, marking the arrival of the spring season in Srinagar.-stock-foto
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Tourists walk inside the Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden past blooming tulip beds on a sunny spring day in Srinagar. The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden was thrown open to the public on Monday by Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory Omar Abdullah, marking the arrival of the spring season in Srinagar.-stock-foto
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Tourists walk inside the Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden past blooming tulip beds on a sunny spring day in Srinagar. The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden was thrown open to the public on Monday by Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory Omar Abdullah, marking the arrival of the spring season in Srinagar.-stock-foto
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Konik ponies at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the-stock-foto
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A general view of partially blooming tulip beds at the Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden on a sunny spring day in Srinagar. The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden was thrown open to the public on Monday by Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory Omar Abdullah, marking the arrival of the spring season in Srinagar.-stock-foto
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Konik ponies at the National Trust's Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire. The grazing animals, a hardy breed originating from Poland, help to maintain "one of Europe's most important wetlands" and attract new species of flora and fauna to the fen, leaving water-filled hoof prints and piles of dung as they go. Comprising one of only four fragments of undrained fen in the UK, Wicken Fen is a key habitat for thousands of species of flowers, insects and birds, playing an important ecological role by locking up carbon in its wet, peaty soil to reduce emissions and thereby helping combat the-stock-foto
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Tourists walk inside the Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden past blooming tulip beds on a sunny spring day in Srinagar. The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden was thrown open to the public on Monday by Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory Omar Abdullah, marking the arrival of the spring season in Srinagar.-stock-foto