Zebra Grin - zebras taking scent look like they are grinning, Masai Mara, Kenya. Picture: Paul Goldstein / Exodus / Rex Features
Black & White - a roller perches on a zebra’s back, Maasai Mara, Kenya. Picture: Paul Goldstein / Exodus / Rex Features
A one-day-old rare baby Grevy zebra makes her debut in public with her mother Henna at Whipsnade Zoo
Zebras stampede over a hidden camera during the annual migration in Masai Mara, Kenya. Irish photographer Paul Mckenzie hid a camera inside a fake plastic rock during the annual migration in Kenya’s Masai Mara national reserve.
Mother and foal zebras drinking (by Tambako the Jaguar)
A lone grevy’s zebra at the foot of the Matthew’s Ranges, at the Wesgate conservancy near Kenya’s Samburu national reserve. They are taller and have bigger ears and sharper stripes than their plains cousins, and are under much greater threat from conflict over scant grazing resources. Fewer than 2,500 exist, down more than 80% since the end of the 1970s, although numbers have stabilised in recent years. Photograph: Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images
Waterhole Warning by ephemerion on Flickr.
A herd of zebras drink at a waterhole in Etosha National Park, Namibia. Wildlife photographers Ann and Steve Toon from Hexham, Northumberland, captured the scene. Ann said: It was particularly amazing to see so many zebras there in the national park. Because of heavy rainfall, the herd was twice the size we anticipated - we had never seen quite so many before. Picture: Ann & Steve Toon/Solent News & Photo Agency
Zebra at San Diego Zoo by Kimberly Wong
(by ‘Carmen’)