For World Tapir Day, we"re bringing you nose-to-nose with a baby South American tapir. The creamy stripes and dashes on its coat help keep this endangered calf camouflaged under the filtered light of the Amazon tree canopy. It may look small now, but mature tapirs are the largest native mammals in South America. About that nose: Tapirs use their prehensile nose trunk to grab plants and berries. And if they submerge under the surface of the water, some even use it as a snorkel.
That s quite a schnoz, baby tapir
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Indigenous Peoples Day
-
That bill s just not going to fit
-
Maldives
-
Serra de Tramuntana, Majorca, Spain
-
The artists come to Venice
-
Giving Tuesday
-
Cinco de Mayo
-
Frozen fun in the Canadian cold
-
Indigenous Peoples Day
-
Happy Easter from the ‘peeps’ at Bing
-
Celebrating the Day of the Dead
-
Point Reyes National Seashore
-
Hooray, hooray, it s Unicorn Day!
-
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
-
Khao Sok National Park in Thailand
-
The Nutcracker performed by the Turkish State Opera and Ballet in Türkiye
-
Christmas Eve
-
Mute swan
-
World Penguin Day
-
Alaska Bald Eagle Festival
-
Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument anniversary
-
African bush elephants in Namibia
-
Stop and see the flowers
-
The fishing village of Reine, Norway
-
Poinsettia Day
-
Joshua Tree National Park, California
-
Pamukkale, Turkey
-
Gemsbok in Namibian sand dunes
-
Is that a smile?
-
Cherry blossom season in Tokyo
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

