Michael Durham Photography

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{ 23 images found }

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  • Water on the camera lens makes a spike bull roosevelt elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti) appear as a shadowy phantom as it traverses a muddy elk trail at night near the Oregon Coast. This was photographed on a natural land preserve managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    bull_elk_at_night_121608CNCe-114.jpg
  • On a wet and miserable night, a spike bull roosevelt elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti) traverses a muddy elk trail near the Oregon Coast. This was photographed on a natural land preserve managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    bull_elk_at_night_121608CNCe-112.jpg
  • On a wet and miserable night, a spike bull roosevelt elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti) traverses a muddy elk trail near the Oregon Coast. This was photographed on a natural land preserve managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    bull_elk_at_night_121608CMs-113.jpg
  • Western Hemlock trees (Tsuga heterophylla) gather nutrients by tapping into the decaying stump of a sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) along the oregon coastal forest managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy. North coast of Oregon.
    night_forest_102309Nl-64F.jpg
  • A western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) grows from the nutrients provided by a rotting stump of a douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) in coastal forest in northern Oregon. Photographed on land managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    nursery_log_102309Nl-49F.jpg
  • A western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) grows from the nutrients provided by a rotting stump of a douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) in coastal forest in northern Oregon. Photographed on land managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    night_forest_102309Nl-41F.jpg
  • An american black bear (Ursus americanus) near Circle Creek on the Oregon Coast. The property is managed as a preserve by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    american_black_bear_6209BBf-5-Edit.jpg
  • A western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) grows from the nutrients provided by a rotting stump of a douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) in coastal forest in northern Oregon. Photographed on land managed by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    night_forest_102309Nl-23F.jpg
  • An american black bear (Ursus americanus) near Circle Creek on the Oregon Coast. The property is managed as a preserve by the North Coast Land Conservancy.
    american_black_bear_6209BBf-3-Edit.jpg
  • An amercian crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) triggers a motion sensing camera in the North Coast Land Coservancy Circle Creek Preserve, Oregon.
    amercian_crow_6209BBf-1.jpg
  • Heavy rain in a swampy forest along the Oregon Coast. The camera was moved during the exposure to enhance the effect of rain.
    torrential_rain_121607NLC-8.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) (foreground) fans her redd with her tail to keep oxygen flowing over the eggs while a male fertilizes the eggs with sperm. Thompson Creek, along the Oregon Coast. This creek is just yards from a new home development project.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-98.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) gaurds her redd in Thompson Creek, along the Oregon Coast. Her tail is white from the constant fanning of her eggs to promote oxygen flow. She will die about two weeks after spawning.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-70.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) gaurds her redd in Thompson Creek, along the Oregon Coast. Her tail is white from the constant fanning of her eggs to promote oxygen flow. She will die about two weeks after spawning.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-59.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) gaurds her redd in Thompson Creek, along the Oregon Coast. Her tail is white from the constant fanning of her eggs to promote oxygen flow. She will die about two weeks after spawning.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-245.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) gaurds her redd in Thompson Creek, along the Oregon Coast. Her tail is white from the constant fanning of her eggs to promote oxygen flow. She will die about two weeks after spawning.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-238.jpg
  • A female coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) (right) gaurds her redd in Thompson Creek, while a male hovers nearby to keep other competing males from fertilizing the eggs.  Oregon Coast. These fish will die about two weeks after spawning.
    wild_oregon_salmon_122907TCs-180.jpg
  • Small mysterious tracks photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-126.jpg
  • Small mysterious tracks photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-130.jpg
  • Small mysterious tracks photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-128.jpg
  • Small mysterious tracks photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-127.jpg
  • Small mysterious tracks photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-125.jpg
  • Tracks of a bird, likely a flicker, foraging in the snow. Photographed after a winter storm on the North Coast Land Conservancy, Circle Creek property. Oregon Coast.
    bird_tracks_in_snow_121608CMs-124.jpg
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