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Vanessa Atalanta caterpillar on a thyme flower, in the natural environment.
Ants crawl on the inflorescences Garden Angelica in the spring.
Flowers wild primrose (Primula veris) closeup on the blurry background
Variable short to tall, softly-hairy perennial; stems erect, with persistent basal leaf-rosettes. Leaves oblong to oval with a heart-shaped base, coarsely toothed, the uppermost unstalked. Flowers bright reddish-purple, occasionally pink or white, 12-18mm long, the whorls forming a dense oblong spike, sometimes interrupted below.\nHabitat: Permanent grassland, heaths, banks and open woodland, generally on rather light soils.\nFlowering Season: June-October.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe north to S Scandinavia; naturalized in Finland and Norway.\n\nThe Plant was widely used by medieval herbalists who believed that it possessed magical properties to ward off various evils. The dried leaves were formerly used as a substitute for snuff. The Plant can also be used as a herbal tea.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Small yellow wild flowers
Genista sagittalis, with yellow blossom, arrow jointed broom - grows out of anthill.
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
horizontal close up Bird's-foot trefoil  field
Primula elatior in Pyrenees
Untouched nature. When a small piece of cultivated land is left alone for a year during the summer, a remarkable transformation takes place. wildflowers begins to emerge, painting the landscape with vibrant hues. Native plants reclaim their territory and bring biodiversity back to the area. Buried seeds from seasons past awaken, shooting up.
Yellow Crab Spider (Misumena vatia) also known as Goldenrod Crab Spider hunting for prey on a Pyramidal Orchid (Anacamptis pyramidalis)
Triphysaria eriantha is a species of flowering plant in the family Orobanchaceae, known by the common names johnny-tuck and butter-and-eggs. It is native to California and southwestern Oregon, where it grows in many types of habitats including chaparral, becoming quite common in some areas. Jejpson Prairie. California.
Leocarpus fragilis insect egg slime mold are yellow or orange organisms with the appearance of mucus or small balls that look like insect eggs light by flash
Pink wildflowers uses in traditional herbal medicine, Switzerland
Oxythyrea funesta is a phytophagous beetle species. The common name “white spotted rose beetle”.
Close-up of an Early Purple Orchid blooming in Spring.
Yellow flowers of Hare's Ear (Phlomis lychnitis) in meadow.
Uncultivated nature
Yellow star of Bethlehem \nGagea sp., bulbous plants blooming in spring in the Steppe on the banks of the Tiligul estuary, southern Ukraine
Small white inflorescence of this famous highly poisonous plant
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
lemon bergamot flowers
Low to short perennial or biennial; stems numerous, erect, unbranched, hairless or with 2 lines of hairs. Leaves lanceolate, 2-pinnately-lobed, hairless or slightly hairy; bracts similar to the leaves, though smaller.\nFlowers pink or red, 15-25mm long, in lax spikes, the upper lip of the corolla blunt, slightly curved, 2-toothed near the apex; calyx not 2-lipped, hairless, inflated in fruit.\nHabitat: Bogs, marshes, damp heaths, moors and open woodland on peaty soils, to 1800m.\nFlowering Season: April-July.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, Except the Faeroes, Iceland and N Scandinavia.\n\nThis is a scarce Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Butterfly \
An Orange-tip Butterfly resting on foliage
Yellow flowers of the medicinal plant tansy close-up. Natural background.
Creamcups, Platystemon californicus, Salt Point State Park,  Sonoma County, California; Northern California Coast.  Papaveraceae
Yellow Star-of-Bethlehem (Gagea lutea)
common spotted orchid (dactylorhiza fuchsii) flower captured in the swiss alps during summer season at an altitude of 1700m.
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