Steven Busulwa, an animal keeper, runs away from a charging rhino at the Uganda Wildlife Conservation Education Center (UWEC) amid the lockdown as part of the measures taken to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), within Wakiso district, in Entebbe, Uganda on April 20, 2020. (Photo by Abubaker Lubowa/Reuters)
Scarecrows dressed as doctors and a patient are seen in front of rainbow coloured hay bales on a farm in Billinge following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Billinge, Britain, May 6, 2020. (Photo by Phil Noble/Reuters)
A man feeds parakeets in St James Park as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, London, Britain, April 22, 2020. (Photo by John Sibley/Reuters)
Substitution mothers are on the way to the forest school with orphaned orangutans where they will teach them to climb trees in Sibolangit, SOCP Quarantine Centre, North Sumatra, Indonesia on January 22, 2019. Like humans, the mother orangutan has to teach her kids everything they need to know to survive on their own. At the SOCP center, human caregivers take on that maternal role. It is the first step in a teaching, socialization and rehabilitation program with the goal of release at the age of 7 to 8 years old. This corresponds with the age when orangutans naturally leave their parents in the wild. (Photo by Alain Schroeder/National Geographic)
A flock of sheep graze at the river Rhine near the Cathedral in Cologne, Germany, Monday, April 27, 2020. (Photo by Martin Meissner/AP Photo)
A female chacma baboon pays a visit to a house in Cape Town, South Africa. This picture is one of the photographs of wildlife through the window by Guardian readers during lockdown, in April 2020. (Photo byKarien van der Westhuizen/Guardian Community)