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Green rose chafer between white dog rose blossoms
Terrge National Park Scenery of Mongolia
The tansy beetle (Chrysolina graminis) macro photography. Bug is sitting on the leaf.
Full shot of eastern chipmunk in Connecticut on lichen-covered rock with raised paw, pachysandra in background and foreground.
Blue Milkweed Beetle Parheminodes pulcher standing on a stem.
Macro shot of a metallic rose chafer or the green rose chafer (Cetonia aurata) crawling on a white blossom of a rose plant flowering in on orchard in sunlight
Hamster
adult Green belly bug of the species Diceraeus melacanthus
Mule Deer Doe in East Central Idaho.
Spectacular metallic green Rose Chafer beetle, closeup. Latin: Cetonia urata. Short depth of focus
The rock squirrel, Otospermophilus variegatus, is a species of rodent in the family Sciuridae and is native to Mexico and the Southwestern United States, including southern Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, West Texas, and the panhandle of Oklahoma. Sonoran Desert, Arizona.
Squirrel on Branch
grasshopper
close-up photo of big stag-beetle (Lucanus cervus)
Navajo Indian Ancestral Land in Arizona.
Lesser stag beetle, dorcus parallelipipedus, on wood. Twilight scene.
Lake Lesnia with water dam on the Kwisa river in Lower Silesian Voivodeship. The dam was constructed between 1901 - 1905 and is still working
Closeup on a small dark black longhorn beetle, Stenurella nigra sitting on a yellow flower in the field
Cortodera humeralis is a species of longhorn beetle in the Cerambycidae family.\nCharacteristics:\nThe beetles become 8 to 11 millimeters long and have a variable body coloration. A dark color variant occurs, the elytra of which are black or brown in color and each has two, rarely only one yellowish spot on the shoulder. The light colour variant has yellow-brown elytra, with a dark elytra seam. \nOccurrence and way of life:\nThey are found in large parts of Europe, but are absent in northern Europe and the British Isles. They inhabit deciduous forests and occur in May and June. Adults are often found sitting on bushes or flowering oaks. The larvae develop in deadwood in soil litter, in fungal fallen wood and also in dead, near-surface roots of deciduous trees (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2006.
Adult Stink bug of the genus Euschistus
Man hiking solo in the mountains. Vacationing in the great outdoors. Man living an active lifestyle.
Black Stink bug (Proxys punctulatus) on a leaf in Houston, TX. Side view macro with copy space.
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A prairie dog is eating slice of carrot with front paws on a grassy lawn.
Steep cliffs, old rock, the Gunnison River.
Another majestic lake in Mt. Assiniboine Provincial Park, Canada
Multiple lakes and an island seen in a huge green forest area in Harjedalen, Sweden, in the summer at sunset.
An Eastern gray squirrel rodent on top of a tree in the bush.
Richmond Hill
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