Meghan y Harry comparten fotografías inéditas de viaje en pareja - 800Noticias
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Meghan Markle y el Príncipe Harry han compartido una conmovedora serie de fotos nunca antes vistas de un viaje privado a África para celebrar el Día Mundial del Elefante.

El duque y la duquesa de Sussex publicaron seis imágenes en su cuenta de Instagram @sussexroyal que muestran a la pareja interactuando con elefantes en la vida salvaje hace dos años, informa The Sun.

La pareja visitó Botswana en 2017, solo unos meses antes de que Harry le propusiera matrimonio, y anteriormente describió el destino romántico como “crucial” para permitirles acercarse.

La primera imagen muestra al Príncipe Harry acercándose a una de las criaturas en su hábitat natural durante un día de safari.

Otra imagen muestra solo las manos de Meghan mientras acaricia la trompa de un elefante.

Las cuatro imágenes restantes que muestran manadas de elefantes en la naturaleza parecen haber sido tomadas por el Príncipe Harry y Meghan.

La pareja compartió las impresionantes fotos con sus 9.3 millones de seguidores para resaltar su trabajo con la organización benéfica de vida silvestre Elephants Without Borders y el Ellen DeGeneres Wildlife Fund.

Para proteger esta manada específica de elefantes, la pareja reveló que las organizaciones benéficas habían equipado a 25 de ellos con collares de navegación por satélite.

La leyenda decía: “Estos collares permiten al equipo de EWB rastrear a los elefantes, así como aprender sus patrones migratorios esenciales para mantener sus corredores seguros y abiertos para que las futuras generaciones de elefantes puedan deambular libremente.


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🐘🐘🐘🐘🐘🐘🐘🐘 Today is #WorldElephantDay and we are pleased to announce that since we followed our friends at @ElephantswithoutBorders (EWB) on Instagram in July, when we were celebrating the environment, you and our friend @TheEllenFund (@TheEllenShow) have spread the word and EWB have been able to help protect 25 elephants by fitting them with satellite navigation collars! These collars allow the team at EWB to track the elephants, as well as to learn their essential migratory patterns to keep their corridors safe and open so future generations of elephants can roam freely. In honour of this amazing support, EWB have named their most recently collared Elephant…ELLEN! We can’t wait to see where she will go! 🐘 Two years ago on World Elephant Day, The Duke and Duchess of Sussex joined Dr Chase to help in this conservation effort. Below, a few words from Mike and his partner Kelly at EWB: • ‘Today is a day to honor and celebrate the majestic elephant and to make a strong stand for conserving and protecting one of the world’s most beloved animals. elephants are intelligent, sentient beings capable of emotions from joy to grief. They are ‘environmental engineers,’ a key-stone umbrella species, and the fight to save them is in effect, a fight to save entire ecosystems and all wildlife. Today elephants are facing many challenges; habitat loss and competition for resources creates conflict with humans, climate change and fires destroy much needed resources and poaching for the demand of ivory makes elephants bigger targets than ever. African elephants are especially prone to human-wildlife conflict because of their large home ranges. Finding, preserving and creating elephant corridors is therefore of great importance in helping to maintain habitats suitable for movement and minimising human-elephant conflict. Corridors are a mitigation technique to better the livelihoods of local communities and the elephants themselves, by providing environment and ample space for wildlife to navigate from one habitat patch to another, without affecting the livelihoods of communities.’ • EWB – Dr Mike Chase, Ms Kelly Landen . 📸 by DOS © SussexRoyal Additional photos: EWB

Una publicación compartida por The Duke and Duchess of Sussex (@sussexroyal) el

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