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Total de Resultados: 32

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ny261021133105 A visitor poses for a photo at Tumalog Falls in the Oslob area of Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204704 A visitor poses for a photo at Tumalog Falls in the Oslob area of Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132104 A closed restaurant in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The pandemic all but stopped international tourism, leading to boarded-up shops and restaurants. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021203405 A closed restaurant in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The pandemic all but stopped international tourism, leading to boarded-up shops and restaurants. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132904 Lorene de Guzman, who rebuilt his home with whale shark tourism money, outside his home in Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. De Guzman added concrete to what had been a hut constructed mostly of nipa, a species of palm. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204004 Lorene de Guzman, who rebuilt his home with whale shark tourism money, outside his home in Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. De Guzman added concrete to what had been a hut constructed mostly of nipa, a species of palm. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132404 The de Guzman family, which has been struggling with the lack of tourism income, prepares a meal at home in Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204205 The de Guzman family, which has been struggling with the lack of tourism income, prepares a meal at home in Cebu Province in the Philippines in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021131805 Whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. Each whale shark has a unique constellation of spots, which bear a resemblance to stars in the night sky. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021203104 Whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. Each whale shark has a unique constellation of spots, which bear a resemblance to stars in the night sky. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021133304 Whale sharks are hand-fed in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. Conservationists say the hand-feeding has changed whale shark behavior, including more damaging encounters with surface hazards. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204505 Whale sharks are hand-fed in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. Conservationists say the hand-feeding has changed whale shark behavior, including more damaging encounters with surface hazards. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132705 A whale shark in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204305 A whale shark in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021131604 Swimming with whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021202905 Swimming with whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132604 Lorene de Guzman feeds whale sharks as tourists look on in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The hand-feeding practice helped guarantee a year-round presence of the sharks for the half a million tourists who came in 2019. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021203804 Lorene de Guzman feeds whale sharks as tourists look on in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The hand-feeding practice helped guarantee a year-round presence of the sharks for the half a million tourists who came in 2019. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021132205 Fishermen paddle out to a whale shark encounter area in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021203604 Fishermen paddle out to a whale shark encounter area in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny231221171705 -- STANDALONE PHOTO FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH YEAREND REVIEWS -- A fisherman feeds whale sharks in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu, Philippines, on Sept. 30, 2021. Hand-feeding keeps the gentle giants around for the benefit of tourists, a practice denounced by conservationists. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021131405 A fisherman feeds whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021205104 A fisherman feeds whale sharks in the waters around Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021133605 Sea wardens carry uyap, a small shrimp used to feed the whale sharks, at dawn in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021205005 Sea wardens carry uyap, a small shrimp used to feed the whale sharks, at dawn in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021133505 Families hang out on a beach in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021204805 Families hang out on a beach in Tan-Awan, a small town in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to swim with the worldÕs biggest fish drew tourists to a Philippines town, but conservation groups denounce the hand-feeding that keeps the gentle creatures around. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny261021131904 A sign advertises whale shark watching in Oslob, the municipality of which Tan-Awan is a part, in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to see whale sharks led to a tourism boom in Oslob. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241021203304 A sign advertises whale shark watching in Oslob, the municipality of which Tan-Awan is a part, in Cebu Province in the Philippines, in September 2021. The chance to see whale sharks led to a tourism boom in Oslob. (Hannah Reyes Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny181018210504 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before Friday 3:01 a.m. ET Oct. 19, 2018. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** A whale shark off the coast in East Arnhem Land, Australia, July 6, 2018. The Dhimurru Rangers are one of more than 100 Indigenous groups spread across the continent who have taken on the job of protecting the land of their forebears, combining traditional methods with contemporary conservation. (David Maurice Smith/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny241017200612 Whale Shark Adventures, a diving excursion operator in Diani Beach, Kenya, Aug. 19, 2017. South of the port city of Mombasa, Diani Beach has been a well-kept secret for travelers since the 1970s. A wake of new dining, shopping and drinking options is now drawing a larger crowd. (Khadija Farah/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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TCDSEOF_ZX006 SEA OF LOVE, 'Fluffy Rock', (Season I, ep. 108, aired May 23, 2022). ©Netflix / Courtesy Everett Collection
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Total de Resultados: 32

Página 1 de 1