penguins berlin germany

navigate by keyword : 1913 activities addition amphibians and animals another antelopes aquarium aquatic architectural architecture area berlin boats breeding brenda built cafacopy capital city complex conservation creatures cultural detail education elephants enclosures entertainment fascinating faasect ade fish flowers garden gardens garten germany giraffe goats home interesting invertebrates kean life lion lizards marine most other panda part penguins place pleasure realistic reconstruction reptiles rhinoceros river rocks tourists trees tropical visitors was which wild zoo zoological zoologischer zoos

african penguins in a zoo in berlin - germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Penguins in Berlin Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Penguins at Berlin zoo in Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bird that looks like a penguin in the zoo in Berlin in Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Penguins Royalty Free Stock Photo
Rhinoceros in Berlin Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Antelopes in Berlin Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Penguins in Berlin Germany
Funny ceramic penguins in Christmas dress, sold at the Christmas market Royalty Free Stock Photo
Vegan protest with stuffed animal penguins in Pariser platz Brandenburg gate in MItte Berlin Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Two cute penguins at zoo in Berlin Royalty Free Stock Photo
Two cute penguins at zoo in Berlin Royalty Free Stock Photo
Two cute penguins at zoo in Berlin Royalty Free Stock Photo
Two cute penguins at zoo in Berlin Royalty Free Stock Photo
Penguins Royalty Free Stock Photo
Opened on 1 August 1844, the Zoologischer Garten Berlin was the first zoo in Germany. The aquarium opened in 1913. The first animals were donated by Frederick William IV, King of Prussia, from the menagerie and pheasantry of the Tiergarten. During World War II, the zoo area was completely destroyed and only 91 of 3,715 animals survived, including two lions, two hyenas, an Asian bull elephant, a hippo bull, ten hamadryas baboons, a chimpanzee, and a black stork. By the end of the war, the zoo was fortified with the Zoo flak tower, a huge flak tower that was one of the last remaining areas of German resistance against the Red Army. Following the zoo`s destruction, it and the associated Aquarium was reconstructed on the most modern principles so as to display the animals in as close to their natural environment as feasible.


Stockphotos.ro (c) 2025. All stock photos are provided by Dreamstime and are copyrighted by their respective owners.