Aktuális sajtó tartalmak és illusztrációs fotók

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Ortenberg, Germany. 20th Aug, 2025. A wild rabbit sits in a meadow during a rain shower near Ortenberg (Ortenau district). Credit: Silas Stein/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Ortenberg, Germany. 20th Aug, 2025. A wild rabbit sniffs flowers in a meadow during a rain shower near Ortenberg (Ortenau district). Credit: Silas Stein/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Ortenberg, Germany. 20th Aug, 2025. A wild rabbit sniffs flowers in a meadow during a rain shower near Ortenberg (Ortenau district). Credit: Silas Stein/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Ortenberg, Germany. 20th Aug, 2025. A wild rabbit sniffs flowers in a meadow during a rain shower near Ortenberg (Ortenau district). Credit: Silas Stein/dpa/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Graham)-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 8-17-25: The spotted lanternfly is a planthopper indigenous to parts of China and Vietnam. It was accidentally introduced into South Korea and has spread invasively to Japan and the United States. Here its killing its host tree The Tree of Heaven. Some ask why this is happening so often and the easy answer is our global economy and interconnected worldwide economic activities among nations, including the flow of goods, services, capital, and people. With lots of international shipping it’s easy to understand that occasional hitchhikers are bound to happen. (Photo By Douglas Gra-stock-foto
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CZECHOSLOVAKIA - 1962 April 24: 1.60 koruna light brown and black postage stamp depicting Przewalski's hors (Equus Przewalskii), also called the takhi, Mongolian wild horse or Dzungarian horse-stock-foto
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CZECHOSLOVAKIA - 1962 April 24: 1.40 koruna carmin-rose and black postage stamp depicting Leopard (Levhart-felis pardus), genus Panthera, a member of the cat family, Felidae-stock-foto
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Brimstone Butterfly. Gonepteryx rhamni is a butterfly of the family Pieridae. It lives throughout the Palearctic zone and is commonly found across Europe, Asia, and North Africa. Across much of its range, it is the only species of its genus, and is therefore simply known locally as the brimstone.-stock-foto
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Brimstone Butterfly. Gonepteryx rhamni is a butterfly of the family Pieridae. It lives throughout the Palearctic zone and is commonly found across Europe, Asia, and North Africa. Across much of its range, it is the only species of its genus, and is therefore simply known locally as the brimstone.-stock-foto
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Brimstone Butterfly. Gonepteryx rhamni is a butterfly of the family Pieridae. It lives throughout the Palearctic zone and is commonly found across Europe, Asia, and North Africa. Across much of its range, it is the only species of its genus, and is therefore simply known locally as the brimstone.-stock-foto
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Brimstone Butterfly. Gonepteryx rhamni is a butterfly of the family Pieridae. It lives throughout the Palearctic zone and is commonly found across Europe, Asia, and North Africa. Across much of its range, it is the only species of its genus, and is therefore simply known locally as the brimstone.-stock-foto
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The green iguana (Iguana iguana), also known as the American iguana is a large, arboreal, mostly herbivorous species of lizard of the genus Iguana-stock-foto
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The green iguana (Iguana iguana), also known as the American iguana is a large, arboreal, mostly herbivorous species of lizard of the genus Iguana-stock-foto
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The capybara or greater capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) is  a member of the genus Hydrochoerus.-stock-foto
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Lobster, Homarus, marine genus of decapods, Decapoda, from the family Lobsteridae. Historical, authentic, digitally restored reproduction from an original from the 19th century. Record date not stated.-stock-foto
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Climbing fish, Anabas testudineus, freshwater fish from the genus Climbing fishes, historical, authentic, digitally restored reproduction from a 19th-century original, record date not stated-stock-foto
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Wax scales of genus Ceroplastes in the family Coccidae on a branch of an ornamental variety of holly, Ilex sp.-stock-foto
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Wax scales of genus Ceroplastes in the family Coccidae on a leaf of an ornamental variety of holly, Ilex sp.-stock-foto
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Wax scales of genus Ceroplastes in the family Coccidae on a leaf of an ornamental variety of holly, Ilex sp.-stock-foto
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Wax scales of genus Ceroplastes in the family Coccidae on a leaf of an ornamental variety of holly, Ilex sp.-stock-foto
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Geranium magnificum, purple cranesbill, is species of plant in genus Geranium, family Geraniaceae.-stock-foto
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Geranium magnificum, purple cranesbill, is species of plant in genus Geranium, family Geraniaceae.-stock-foto
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Hare standing on its back legs in Oxfordshire,UK-stock-foto
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Hare standing on its back legs in Oxfordshire,UK-stock-foto