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Lepidoptera insects in the wild, North China
Beetle
Adela reaumurella sur une plante non identifiée.
Lytta magister, the desert blister beetle or master blister beetle, found in Joshua Tree National Park, California
A cockroach, Megaloblatta blaberoides, on a ginger flower, Costa Rica
A black beetle on a flower in summer.
Braconid wasp from the Agathidinae suborder on a thistle flower head. Parasitic insects that lay eggs on caterpillars. Their larvae feed off them until the caterpillar dies.
Closeup of Oedemera nobilis
Natural closeup on the colorful European fiery clearwing diurnal moth, Pyropteron chrysidiforme
Elevated view of green plants in green rainforest at Tayrona National Park, Colombia.
Green ram on fodder plant
Beautiful plant, Indian head ginger, also known as Crape ginger, Malay ginger, Spiral Flag, or Wild ginger, low angle view, front shot, growing and symbiotic partnership with ant in tropical moist montane forest, national park in northern Thailand.
A macro of an insect perched on a long, green leaf of a plant
Chrysomela Populi on a flower spreading it´s shell in back lit light
a firefly on lilac orchid at horizontal composition
Pasture rose (native to eastern North America), with flower longhorn beetle, taken in a Connecticut woodland meadow
Contrast black on yellow
Caterpillars eating a green leaf
Nemophora metallica sur plante non identifiée.
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.
Closeup on a clicking beetle, Hemicrepidius niger, eating on a white flower in a grassland against in a green background
Caterpillar crawling on green leaf.
Flies on wild plants, North China
Pachnoda marginata peregrina from Tropical Africa
Coleoptera Anthaxia hungarica feeding on yellow flower, Sierra de Mariola, Alcoy, Spain
Lichen on the forest floor.
Nemophora metallica on unidentified plant.
Deciduous tree to 25m, with smooth silvery-gray bark striped with brown; trunk fluted. Leaves oval, pointed, somewhat pleated, sharply toothed, hairy on veins beneath. Catkins greenish to 5cm, with the leaves. Fruit in pendant clusters, surrounded by 3-lobed bracts; nuts small.\nFlowering Season: April-May.\nHabitat: Woods, hedgerows and scrub, occasionally pollarded, mostly in low altitudes.\nDistribution: S. Britain and Europe, north to S Sweden.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Closeup on the Scarce footman moth,Eilema complana sipping nectar from the pink flowers of Eupatorium cannibinum
Bugs fighting.
Free Images: "bestof:Bryotropha umbrosella.jpg Bryotropha umbrosella http //www boldsystems org/index php/Taxbrowser_Taxonpage taxid 286184 Entry at BOLD Systems - http //www"
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