For a story on the wildlife of Africa’s Albertine Rift, Joel Sartore photographed Egyptian fruit bats roosting inside a Ugandan cave. When he left the cave at the end of the day and removed his ...
Joel Sartore is a photographer, speaker, author, teacher, conservationist, National Geographic Fellow and a regular contributor to National Geographic Magazine. Joel started the Photo Ark in his ...
World-renowned photographer Joel Sartore is on a mission to photograph the world’s most rare and vulnerable species. If you want to start your own photo ark, or simply take your everyday ...
This story appears in the October 2019 issue of National Geographic magazine. A naked mole rat. That was photographer Joel Sartore’s first model in 2006 when he began making studio portraits of ...
As more guests begin returning to the Lincoln Children's Zoo, so have some fan favorites, including goats, animal encounters and the National Geographic Photo Ark.
Join National Geographic photographer Joel Sartore as he travels 10,000 miles from his home in Nebraska to Madagascar. He’s here to photograph creatures found nowhere else on the planet ...
The plight of pangolins came to global attention through wildlife photographers. Photograph by Joel Sartore / National Geographic Fundamental to saving an endangered species is raising awareness ...
This story ran in the April 2016 issue of National Geographic magazine. And to think it all started with a naked mole rat. The year was 2006, and National Geographic photographer Joel Sartore ...
Brett Ratcliffe, emeritus professor of entomology at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, named the recently discovered species Bothynus sartorei after Joel Sartore, a renowned National ...
The mole rat was one of the first entries into photographer Joel Sartore's Photo Ark, which now has over 6,500 species.
Image by Joel Sartore/ Photo Ark. The remarkable nose of the star-nosed mole (Condylura cristata). Seeing a star-nosed mole in person is special. Discovering new insights into the biology of this ...