869-5169 - Merlet's scorpionfish or green-lace scorpionfish camouflaged venomous scorpion fish with open mouth underwater Coral Sea Australia (Rhinopias aphanes)
832-374509 - Spectacular Rustgill, Laughing Gym, Laughing Jim (Gymnopilus junonius, Gymnopilus spectabilis), poisonous mushrooms on a tree stump with moss
832-367788 - Golden Poison Frog or Golden Dart Frog (Phyllobates terribilis), native to Colombia, in captivity, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Europe
832-368129 - Dyeing Dart Frog (Dendrobates tinctorius), a poison dart frog, native to Brazil, French Guiana and Suriname, in captivity, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Europe
465-3181 - Wagler's pit viper (Tropidolaemus wagleri) a venomous green pit viper found throughout Southeast Asia, Sarawak, Borneo, Malaysia, Southeast Asia, Asia
832-237998 - Warning sign, methyl, toxic, highly flammable, at the fuel depot of the pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, Ingelheim, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, Europe
869-4958 - common foxglove or purple foxglove close-up of flower head of flowering foxglove with group of purple flowers blossoms blooms poisonous plant medicinal plant
832-145672 - Symbolic nuclear waste barrels stacked on a loading platform, anti-nuclear demonstration against the Gorleben disposal site, Lueneburg, Lower Saxony, Germany, Europe
832-136220 - Beware of poisonous snakes, sign at a rest stop on Interstate 90 at a hiking trail above the Missouri River, Chamberlain, South Dakota, USA
1113-92931 - Invasive Lionfish speared by Diver, Pterois volitans, Caribbean Sea, Dominica, Leeward Antilles, Lesser Antilles, Antilles, Carribean, West Indies, Central America, North America
857-66684 - Workers repairing electronics at a shop in Accra, Ghana. The computers are shipped here from Europe and the USA and some are reused but majority are dumped in Ghana.
857-66681 - Burning of computer wire and parts to recover copper and other metals in Accra, Ghana. The computers are shipped here from Europe and the USA and some are reused but majority are dumped in Ghana. Poor workers often from the northern poorer region of Ghana do the work and sell the copper to buyers who send the copper to China or India.
857-66685 - Workers repairing electronics at a shop in Accra, Ghana. The computers are shipped here from Europe and the USA and some are reused but majority are dumped in Ghana.
857-66634 - At CRT Recycling in Brockton, Massachusetts, German Pantoja stands with TVs that he selected and are put in a sea container for shipment to Venezuela, where they will be repaired and sold as used TVs.
857-66661 - The Mueller-Guttenbrunn Metal Recycling facility in Amstetten, Austria. This is where electronics goods as well as cars and other appliances are sent for recycling under the European Waste Electrics Electronics Equipment (WEEE) Initiative. All electronics goods must be recycled in an environmentally friendly manner.
857-66662 - Electronics recycling facility Metran in Kematen, Austria is where metals and plastics are sorted after the waste is first shredded at Mueller-Guttenbrunn in Amstetten. At a shake table the waste is separated by friction as hard items drop through first because they have less friction. The drum turns and small objects drop through the holes. Large piles of e-waste plastics objects and circuit boards. Avci Bilal walks atop a pile of e-waste that is waiting to be processed at Metran.
857-66624 - Home electronics collection day in Stamford, Connecticut is sponsored by Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority (CRRA). Local residents can bring in old electronics for free collection. The equipment is sent to Amandi who pays about 20 cents a pound to recycle the electronics.
857-66640 - At ElectroniCycle, a recycling company in Gardner, Massachusetts CRT monitors are being broken to be recycled for glass-to-glass recycling.
857-66653 - Circuit boards for recycling in Taizhou Taigang Metal Co. Ltd., Fengjiang Disassembling Industrial Park, Luqiao District, Taizhou City, Zhejiang Province, China.
857-66629 - At CRT Recycling in Brockton, Massachusetts, workers look over electronics collected locally to determine what is valuable to recycle in house and what is sent overseas.
857-66644 - Taicang Port Imported Recyclable Resources Processing Zone, near Shanghai, China. This is a development project of the government to encourage business in recycling of metals and plastics, some of which comes from electronics.
857-66658 - Seven workers are disassembling computers at TES-AMM Shanghai, which was founded on September 21, 2005, currently has 67 employees of which 26 are workers. With an annual production capacity of 10,000 tons, it has only treated 2,000 tons of e-waste from its founding more than a year ago. 'The biggest problem is that there isn't an e-waste recycling channel in China. The biggest chunks of raw materials we get are from government bodies, which are upgrading their equipments, and electronic appliances franchises that are washing out their outdated inventories. We don't have any imported e-waste because that's banned by the government. It takes a worker no more than ten minutes to disassemble a computer, and each worker can deal with between 60 to 70 computers a day,' says Janice Wu, who's the Environment & Quality Management Dept. Manager and Plant Manager Assistant.