Remarkable photographs which capture the vicious battle for survival  in the wild 
    
   By  Sadie Whitelocks
 
   
 It's fight not flight that keeps them  alive. 
From snarling  lionesses in the bush to a great white shark snatching a seal from the  air, these amazing pictures show nature at its most dramatic. 
The wildlife photographers who took them  prowled four continents and placed themselves within yards of some of  the wilds most lethal creatures to take these spectacular images.
   
 Bald move: Photographer and writer Steve Bloom  has spent a decade trekking the globe in a  bid to capture some of nature's most feared species in moments of  conflict such as these two bald eagles battling it out in Alaska
 Photographer, Steve Bloom, 58, compiled the  incredible set of pictures and took a walk on the wild side to capture  many of the images himself.
While visiting a nature reserve in Assam, India, Steve found  himself face-to-face with a two-ton rhino. 'I managed to gain permission  to visit a section of the reserve people aren't usually allowed to go  to,' explained Steve.
 
 
 'The rhino was standing around  happily grazing - until it saw me and suddenly charged. It ran with full  force like an accelerating car. I was in an open jeep so I was in a  quite vulnerable position. The armed ranger I was with tried to fire a  warning shot into the air but his rifle jammed.
'Then the driver tried to start the jeep but  in the heat of the moment the engine stalled. There was nothing I could  do but point my camera at the beast. It suddenly swerved and covered us  in dust. It felt like you could hear my heartbeat from the other end of  India.'
 
  
 Team effort: A group of bloody-mouthed African  lions casually maul a hippopotamus as it is dragged to the ground in  Masai Mara, Kenya 
 
  
 No escape: Four large male lions attack a  buffalo from all sides, again in the Masai Mara, Kenya
     
 
  
 
    
 Dirty dancing: One polar bear raises its left  leg towards its rival as they spar at Cape Churchill in Manitoba, Canada, while two kangaroos are at each others throats on Kangaroo  Island in Australia 
   
 
  
 
Rustling up a storm: Two African elephants  kick up dust as they prepare to charge at each other in Botswana
  
 Deep dive: A great white shark is caught  mid-attack in South Africa as it emerges out of the ocean depths,  flinging itself towards its prey
    
 
    
 Beary scary: Two grown polar bears spar in Cape  Churchill, Manitoba, Canada (top) while two young brown bears  play-fight in Katmai National Park in Alaska (bottom)
   
  
 What big teeth you have: Two hippopotamus  -  famed for their large mouths - battle it out in a river in Botswana
 
  
 Water fight: Two hippos bear their teeth while  they violently writhe in a Kenyan river
    He began wildlife while on holiday in  South Africa in 1993 and three years later decided to make it his  full-time career.
 
Explaining his inspiration  he said: 'As a child in South Africa, I'd  always been interested in visual images, as well as cinema. There was no TV in South Africa, too, as the authorities at that time had banned it, so I spent a lot of time looking at Life and other photo magazines.'
 
But not all animals  involved in conflicts reach in a messy end.  In many cases animals are fighting creatures of the same species for dominance - as shown in the picture of Japanese macaques squabbling in hot springs.  In other situations it is the prey that has the upper hand.
 
 
  
 
 
  
 Tusk tackle: This aerial view shows two African  elephants fighting at Amboseli National Park in the Kajiado District,  Rift Valley Province, Kenya. Elephants use their tusks for digging for  roots and for fighting each other during mating season 
  
   Mud bath: Two male African Elephants thrash  around on a muddy river bed battling it out in Botswana
  'For example a cheetah is the fastest land animal at around 70 miles-per-hour,' said Steve. 'But it can only  run in short bursts of speed. If it doesn't catch the antelope it's  chasing within the first few seconds it's the antelope that will outrun  the cheetah.
 
 'So creatures need to be adaptable,  learn from their surroundings and above all stay strong.'
 
 Over recent years he has published  numerous books exhibiting his work  including Trading Places:The Merchants of Nairobi, Living Africa,  Elephant!, Spirit of the Wild, Untamed and In Praise of Primates.
 
  
 Lethal embrace: A cheetah attacks a wildebeest  head-on in the Serengeti, Tanzania
 
  
 Group outing: Two pairs of polar bears rear up  as they duel in the snow in Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
   
 
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