Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
This is a relatively-common butterfly that is unmistakable when seen at rest - the rings on the hindwings giving this butterfly its common name.
Female Ergates faber on pine wood. This large beetle needs pine wood for their larva.
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
Close-up of resting pearl crescent butterfly (Phyciodes tharos) in late summer, taken in Connecticut. This common but beautiful North American butterfly is easy to overlook because of its small size (1\
adult Green belly bug of the species Diceraeus melacanthus
Ichneumon wasp
A closeup of the meadow brown butterfly (Maniola jurtina) on a purple flower
Young planted beech seedlings in the forest with a protective stick that helps the trees grow straight. The stick helps to see small tree in the grass and seams, during space cleaning for tree light. Slovenia.
photo of green fly on plant stem. selective focus
blossoming white flowers
Semi high-speed shot of a hummingbird hark moth feeding on lavender. Motion is conveyed via slight bluring of the wings.
Beetle
A beautiful brown butterfly sits on a blooming oregano.
A fly pauses on a leaf in Bali, Indonesia
Macro beetle Leptura fulva on thistle Eryngium genus
Cornus alba 'Bud's Yellow'\nSmall flowers on a young dogwood in springtime in Metro Vancouver.\n\nPlant Hardiness Zone 8A.
Butterfly
Aphid community on branch - animal behavior.
butterfly on the flower in spring
The butterfly landed on the leaves
Closeup on a small dark black longhorn beetle, Stenurella nigra sitting on a yellow flower in the field
Small Heath (Coenonympha pamphilus) on green leaf.
Adult Stink bug of the genus Euschistus
Spotted Thyris butterfly forages for flowers in summer in the Laurentian Forest.
Pink Ammania plant, Ammannia gracilis, with blossoms.
Summer garden
WHITE ARROW ROOT IN GARDEN
Green-veined white butterly on top of a blooming Cardamine pratensis.
butterfly on the flower
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.
Free Images: "bestof:Hepialus Humuli (female).png Hepialus humuli � 21-35 mm Ghost Moth hopwortelboorder l'Hépiale du houblon Grosser Hopfen-Wurzelbohrer European-butterfly 072-X"
Hepialus_Humuli_(female).png
Hepialus humuli (Ghost moth), Arnhem, the Netherlands - 2.jpg
Hepialus humuli (Ghost moth), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg
European-butterfly_072-X.jpg
BMAT1-08.jpg
Terms of Use   Search of the Day