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  • A yak stands my the side of a mountain road on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-003.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. An Asian Yak in an enclosure in Wuhan zoo. In many of China's 'second-tier' cities, away from the modern zoos in the megacities of Beijing and Shanghai, hide a plethora of smaller unknown zoos. In these zoos, what can only be described as animal abuse is subtly taking place in the form of deprivation of light, space, sanitation and social contact with other animals. Living in awful conditions, these animals spend there days entertaining tourists who seem oblivious to the animals' plight and squalid existence. 2008.
    China-Zoos-08-23-012.JPG
  • A yak on the grasslands near to Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-046.JPG
  • A young Tibetan man embraces his yak on the shore of Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-037.JPG
  • A yak next to Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-032.JPG
  • A woman tends to her yaks on the shores of Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-036.JPG
  • Yaks by the side of the road on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-009.JPG
  • A child poses for a photograph by the side of the road on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-006.JPG
  • A yak stands near a water channel in the town of Sershul, in northern Sichuan Province on the Tibetan Plateau. The region is known as Sanjiangyuan, or Three Rivers Headwaters, as it is the source of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers which feed millions of people who live downstream.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-630.JPG
  • The ribcage of a yak lies in the highland grasslands 5,000 meters above sea level. The Sanjiangyuan or Three Rivers Headwater region of western China contains the sources of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-507.JPG
  • Yak bones lies in the highland grasslands 5,000 meters above sea level. The Sanjiangyuan or Three Rivers Headwater region of western China contains the sources of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-508.JPG
  • A yak drinks water from a river in the Sanjiangyuan or Three Rivers Headwater region of western China. The region contains the sources of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-473.JPG
  • A yak skull lies in the highland grasslands 5,000 meters above sea level. The Sanjiangyuan or Three Rivers Headwater region of western China contains the sources of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-510.JPG
  • A lone yak stands on the shores of Yamdrok Lake in Tibet. Adorned in colorful attire and decorations, its owner charges tourists to pose for photos with it. Nestled in at over 4,400m above sea level, the turqoise freshwater lake glistens, surrounded by rolling grasslands and snow-capped mountains. The climate is changing here however as temperatures are rising, altering the highland grasslands and the fragile ecosystems on the 'roof of the world'.
    Tibet-18-06-027.JPG
  • A yak skull hangs outside a Tibetan home in the Jiuzhaigou National Park. Sichuan Province. China.
    China-Sichuan-Jiuzhaigou-11-16-002.JPG
  • Yaks on the Tibetan Plateau, in western China.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-375.JPG
  • Yaks drink water from a river in the Sanjiangyuan or Three Rivers Headwater region of western China. The region contains the sources of the Yangtze, Mekong and Yellow Rivers.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-471.JPG
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