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The Eurasian Ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus) or simply Ruffe is a freshwater fish found in temperate regions of Europe and northern Asia. In the photo the female before spawning
Flatfish freshly caught from sea isolated
Wooly Aphid on finger - animal behavior.
Colorful tails of fresh prawns.
Betok fish (Anabas testudineus) on the mainland
Raw spotted sole fish isolated on white background
Small, cryptic, bizarre insect; pest of specific plant species.  Pictured here on Mexican Sunflower (Tithonia diversifolia)
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Close-Up Of Fish Against White Background
Exotic insects of the fauna of South America common in Central and South America, Mexico and the Pacific fauna. large tropical species of semi-winged insects from the Lantern family, Large hymenoptera, scorpion-like, spiders and beetles
Collection of Flying Insect Specimens
little  stickleback on white background
A close up of a cicada on a stick.
Fish siganus rivulatus isolated on white background (Dusky Spinefoot)
Zeuzera pyrina, the leopard moth or wood leopard moth, is a moth of the family Cossidae. \nIt is considered a pest by fruit growers, as the larvae feed on branches of many kinds of fruit trees (see list below). Olive trees in particular are very susceptible and can be killed by the larvae burrowing within them. \nDescription:\nZeuzera pyrina has a wingspan of 35–60 mm. This is a highly distinctive species. The male is slightly smaller than the female. The length of the abdomen of the female is about 45–50 mm. These moths have a white head, with a black forehead and a very furry white thorax marked with six black spots. The abdomen is black, with short white hair-like scales on the posterior edge of each segment and a flat brush of scales on the apex. Forewings are whitish, long and narrow, with numerous black spots or black spots with white interior spots, arranged in rows along the veins. Hindwings are translucent, except in the anal area, with small black spots. In addition to the dimensions, the two sexes differ in the shape of the antennas, thinner in the female, while in the male they are markedly bipectinate, with the exception of terminals articles.\nBiology:\nThe moth flies from June to September depending on the location. The caterpillars are xylophagous. They feed on the wood of various deciduous trees and shrubs , feeding internally for two or three years in the stems and branches before emerging to pupate under the bark. It can be a pest of fruit production. \nHabitat:\nThese moths are associated with woodland, gardens and orchards. \nDistribution:\nThis species can be found primarily in Europe (excluding Ireland) but also in northern Africa (Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco) and Asia (Taiwan, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Korea, Lebanon, Sri Lanka, Syria, Turkey).Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Texas (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Close-up brown leech on white background
Prepared Sea Bass Fish - white background.
A fish The three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) on the background of a 5 mm measurement grid. Ichthyology research.
Carp tail close-up isolated on white background
The brill is a species of flatfish in the turbot family of the order Pleuronectiformes.
A slice of star fruit isolated on white background.Please see my other fruit related images in the below lightbox:
Fresh John Dory, zeus faber, Fish against White Background
Painted Comber, small seabass grouper fish family Serranus Scriba, of Serranidae family from Mediterranean, on light blue background
A lacewing with transparent wings has changed its color under the influence of cold.
Eastern dobsonfly (female) on fence post of deck, with finger to show the large size of this insect. Her hooked jaws can inflict a painful bite. The aquatic larva of the dobsonfly, known as a hellgrammite, is also large and intimidating, and can catch prey as large as small fish. Most active at night, the adult may fly toward lights. Anglers use hellgrammites as bait, especially for smallmouth bass. The presence of hellgrammites in a stream indicates clean water.
Fresh Turbot Fish (Psetta maxima) Isolated on White Background
Eublemma purpurina, the beautiful marbled, is a moth of the family Erebidae. The species was first described by Michael Denis and Ignaz Schiffermüller in 1775. It is found from North Africa through the Iberian Peninsula and southern France east to Romania, southern Russia, southern Turkey up to western central Asia. In the north it ranges to Valais, in eastern Austria and Hungary and the Czech Republic. \nThe wingspan is 20–26 millimeters. Adults are on wing from May to June and from August to September in two generations. \nThe larvae feed on creeping thistle (Cirsium arvense) (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Rockfish with white back
Side View Of A Fly Isolated On A White Background
Free Images: "bestof:FMIB 53099 Squilla ciliata.jpeg Squilla ciliata Subject Squilla Tag Shellfish 1831 Cite book Crustacea in Beechey Frederick William Narrative of a Voyage to the"
FMIB_43267_Moose.jpeg
Fra_Angelico,_Fra_Filippo_Lippi,_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi.jpg
FMIB_42819_Oyster_Farm_at_Kaidaichi.jpeg
FMIB_34492_Cannery,_Hoonah,_Alaska.jpeg
FMIB_51605_Coral_Reef_at_Apia.jpeg
FMIB_42802_View_of_a_Turtle_Farm,_Fukagawa,_Tokyo,_Japan.jpeg
FMIB_49016_Kootenay_Indian_family_at_Moyle_Lake.jpeg
FMIB_38488_Coral_Reef_of_the_Bahamas.jpeg
FMIB_33626_Lake_Pepin.jpeg
FMIB_36296_Pond_Fish-Cultural_Station,_Mammoth_Spring,_Ark_(Bureau_of_Fisheries).jpeg
FMIB_47518_Both_trout_ans_bass_are_cultivated_at_many_of_the_stations_This_view_of_the_station_at_Manchester,_Iowa,_shows_stock_ponds_in.jpeg
Lawrence,_Sir_Thomas_-_A_boy,_called_the_Rev._Ozias_Thurston_Linley_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Frederick_George_Cotman_-_One_of_the_Family_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
William_Frederick_Yeames_-_And_when_did_you_last_see_your_father?_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Portrait_of_Catherine_Gray,_Lady_Manners,_by_Thomas_Lawrence.jpg
A_Cherub_Head_in_Different_Views_(Miss_Frances_Gordon,_by_Sir_Joshua_Reynolds.jpg
Heads_of_Angels_-_Miss_Frances_Gordon)_by_Sir_Joshua_Reynolds,_PRA.jpg
Ascribed_to_Michelangelo_-_Christ_and_the_woman_of_Samaria_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Water-Lilies-and-Japanese-Bridge-(1897-1899)-Monet.jpg
De_Champaigne,_Philippe,_The_Visitation,_1643-48.jpg
Lord Leighton, Frederic, After Vespers, 1871.jpg
Sandro_Botticelli_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Fra_Angelico_and_Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Fra_Angelico_and_Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi_-_Google_Art_Project_(central_cropped).jpg
Fra_Angelico_and_Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi_-_Google_Art_Project_(cropped).jpg
Fra_Angelico_and_Fra_Filippo_Lippi_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Magi_-_Google_Art_Project_(cropped_right).jpg
Allegorie_op_de_nagedachtenis_van_Frederik_Hendrik,_prins_van_Oranje,_met_het_portret_van_zijn_weduwe_Amalia_van_Solms_Rijksmuseum_SK-A-869.jpeg
FMIB_53099_Squilla_ciliata.jpeg
FMIB_53092_Pagurus_pictus.jpeg
FMIB_53093_Coenobita_clypeata.jpeg
FMIB_53094_Oagyrys_splendescens.jpeg
FMIB_53100_Idotea_bienspida.jpeg
FMIB_53103_Gammarus_lythlops.jpeg
FMIB_53095_Porcellana_ceccinea.jpeg
FMIB_53096_Porcellana_ceccinea.jpeg
FMIB_53097_Crangon_salebrosus.jpeg
FMIB_53098_Hippolite_armata.jpeg
FMIB_53101_Crangon_lar.jpeg
FMIB_53102_Hippolite_cornuta.jpeg
FMIB_46471_Squilla_mantis,_from_the_Mediterranean.jpeg
FMIB_46411_Early_larval_stage_of_a_species_of_Squilla,_probably_S_dubia.jpeg
FMIB_46770_Squille_maculee.jpeg
FMIB_51216_Mantis_Shrimp.jpeg
FMIB_52699_Squilla_empusa.jpeg
FMIB_38535_Mantis_Shrimp_From_a_Specimen_in_the_New_York_Aquarium.jpeg
FMIB_33083_Lobster.jpeg
FMIB_33012_Corystes_Cassivelaunus_(Female).jpeg
FMIB_33112_Corystes_Cassivelaunus_(Male).jpeg
FMIB_46423_Thaumastocheles_zalecus.jpeg
FMIB_46441_Well_Shrimp_(Niphargus_aquilex).jpeg
FMIB_46457_Common_Shrimp_(Crangon_vulgaris).jpeg
FMIB_46459_Apus_cancriformis,_from_Kirkcudbrightshire.jpeg
FMIB_46482_Bathynomus_giganteus.jpeg
FMIB_46462_Penaeus_caramote_from_the_Mediterranean.jpeg
FMIB_46469_Calappa_flammea,_Brazil.jpeg
FMIB_46477_Gulf-Weed_Crab,_Planes_Minutus.jpeg
FMIB_46481_Deep-Sea_Prawn,_Nematocarcinus_undulatipes.jpeg
FMIB_46484_Land_Crayfish,_Eugaeus_cunicularis,_Tasmania.jpeg
FMIB_46489_Aeglea_laevis,_South_America.jpeg
FMIB_46493_West_Indian_Land-Crab,_Gocarinus_ruricola.jpeg
FMIB_46388_Third_Maxilliped_of_Lobster.jpeg
FMIB_46395_Fairy_Shrimp_(Chirocephalus_diaphanus),_Male.jpeg
FMIB_46406_First_larval_stage_of_Munida_rugosa.jpeg
FMIB_46424_Deep-Sea_Crab_(Platymaia_wyville-thomsoni).jpeg
FMIB_46463_Common_Shore-Crab_(Carcinus_maenas).jpeg
FMIB_46465_Common_Spiny_Lobster_(Palinurus_vulgaris).jpeg
FMIB_46472_Swimming_Crab,_Portunus_depurator,_British.jpeg
FMIB_46478_Ocypode_cursor,_West_Africa.jpeg
FMIB_46494_Land_Hermit-Crab,_Caenobita_rugosa.jpeg
FMIB_46495_Coco-Nut_Crab,_Birgus_latro.jpeg
FMIB_46497_Norway_lobster,_Nephrops_norvegicus.jpeg
FMIB_46498_Common_edible_crab,_Cancer_pagurus_British.jpeg
FMIB_46389_Walking_Legs_of_Lobster.jpeg
FMIB_46408_Larval_Stages_of_the_Prawn_--_Penaeus.jpeg
FMIB_46409_Newly-Hatched_Young_of_a_Crayfish_(Astacus_fluviatilis).jpeg
FMIB_46434_Brine_Shrimp_(Artemia_salina).jpeg
FMIB_46474_Corystes_cassivelaunus,_Male_(at_Left)_and_Female_(On_Right).jpeg
FMIB_46475_Albunca_symnista,_one_of_the_Hippidea,_Indian_seas.jpeg
FMIB_46483_Murray_River_'Lobster,'_Astacopsis_spinifer,_New_South_Wales.jpeg
FMIB_46277_Norwegian_Deep-Water_Prawn_(Pandalus_borealis),_Female.jpeg
FMIB_46386_Common_Lobster_(Homarus_gammarus),_Female,_from_the_Side.jpeg
FMIB_46391_Dissection_of_Male_Lobster,_from_the_Side.jpeg
FMIB_46393_First_Larval_Stage_of_the_Common_Lobster.jpeg
FMIB_46405_Last_larval_stage_of_the_common_porcelain_crab_(Porcellana_longicornis).jpeg
FMIB_46407_Phyllosoma_larva_of_the_common_spiny_lobster_(Palinurus_vulgaris).jpeg
FMIB_46421_Deep-Sea_Lobster_(Nephropsis_stewartii),_from_the_Bay_of_Bengal.jpeg
FMIB_46422_Munidopsis_regia,_a_Deep-Sea_Galatheid_from_the_Bay_of_Bengal.jpeg
FMIB_46415_Common_Hermit_Crab_(Eupagurus_bernhardus)_removed_from_the_shell.jpeg
FMIB_46473_Spider-Crab,_Maia_squinado,_Dressed_in_fragments_of_weed,_British.jpeg
FMIB_46479_Gelasimus_tangeri,_Male_Above,_Female_Below_West_Africa.jpeg
FMIB_46485_Palaemon_jamaiciensis,_A_large_freshwater_prawn_of_the_family_Palaemonidae,_West_Indies.jpeg
FMIB_46486_Atya_scabra,_a_fresh-water_prawn_of_the_family_Atvidae,_West_Indies.jpeg
FMIB_46404_Larval_stages_of_the_common_shore_crab_(Carcinus_maenas).jpeg
FMIB_46412_Larval_stages_of_the_Brine_Shrimp_(Artemia_salina).jpeg
FMIB_46425_Polycheles_phosphorus,_One_of_the_Eryonidea,_Female,_from_the_Indian_ocean.jpeg
FMIB_46467_Common_Hermit-Crab,_Eupagurus_henhardus,_in_the_shell_of_a_whelk.jpeg
FMIB_46487_River_Crab_of_Southern_Europe,_Potamon_edule_(or_Telphusa_fluviatilis).jpeg
FMIB_46488_Sesarma_chiagra,_a_Freshwater_crab_of_the_family_Grapsidae,_from_Brazil.jpeg
FMIB_46492_Blind_Crayfish_of_the_Mammoth_Cave_of_Kentucky,_Cambarus_pellucides.jpeg
FMIB_45471_Deep-Sea_Crustacea_with_Abnormally_Large_Eyes.jpeg
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