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White Ligusticum scoticum aka Scots lovage or Scottish licorice root flowers
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Closeup on a white black striped Penthophera morio moth hanging in the green vegetation in Sofia, Bulgaria
Heracleum maximum, Cow Parsnip or  Indian Celery, is the only member of the genus Heracleum native to North America. Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve, Oakland, California. Apriaceae.
Close up of a wild angelica flower head
Closeup of Oedemera nobilis
Summer herbs, forest atmosphere
Tiny butterfly on a twig with purple flowers
Hemiptera wax Cicadellidae insects on wild plants, North China
Medium to tall, rather bristly biennial; stem erect, purple or purple spotted. Leaves 2-3 pinnate, dark green, but eventually turning purple; leaflets oval, toothed. Flowers white, 2mm, in compound umbels which are nodding in bud, the petals hairless; bracts usually absent, bracteoles hairy.  Fruit oblong, tapered towards the apex, 4-7mm, often purple.\nHabitat: Rough grassland, semi shaded places, on well drained soils, generally in low attitudes.\nFlowering Season: May-July.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe; absent from the Faeroes, Iceland, Norway, Finland and Spitsbergen.\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands for the described Habitats.\nToxicity:\nChaerophyllum temulum contains (mainly in the upper parts and fruits) a volatile alkaloid chaerophylline, as well as other (probably glycosidally bound) toxins, the chemistry and pharmacology of which has, as yet, been but little studied. Externally, the sap of the plant can cause inflammation of the skin and persistent rashes. If consumed, the plant causes gastro-intestinal inflammation, drowsiness, vertigo and cardiac weakness. Human poisonings have seldom been observed, because the plant lacks aromatic essential oils that could lead to its being confused with edible umbellifers used to flavour food. It is, however, used occasionally in folk medicine. Animal poisonings by the plant are commoner than those of humans, pigs and cattle thus intoxicated exhibiting a staggering gait, unsteady stance, apathy and severe, exhausting colic, ending sometimes in death. \nHerbal medicine:\nChaerophyllum temulum has been used in folk medicine, in small doses, to treat arthritis, dropsy, and chronic skin complaints, and as a spring tonic. The early modern physician Boerhaave (1668–1738) once successfully used a decoction of the herb combined with Sarsaparilla to treat a woman suffering from leprosy – in the course of which treatment temporary blindness was a severe side effect following each dose (source Wikipedia).
Common woodlice under a bark
Tarnished Plant Bug on Asteraceae sp. flower.
A Mealworm Beetle, Tenebrio molitor, with it's head buried into a dead thistle head. Dalton Crag, Cumbria, England.
Blue Pierrot Butterfly was clicked using Mobile Macro photography . These are the images shot on iphone12 with a macro lens.
The green forester (Adscita statices) can be very common in its preferred habitats , beatiful photo
Great black wasp (Sphex pensylvanicus) and flowers in summer meadow, Connecticut. The daisy-like flower on the right is fleabane; the others are narrow-leaved mountain mint.
Green ram on fodder plant
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Closeup on a clicking beetle, Hemicrepidius niger, eating on a white flower in a grassland against in a green background
Ammi visnaga (toothpick-plan) flowerhead captured during summer season in a garden with herbal medicine-flowers.
A large woolen slider  ( Bombylius major )  on plant in nature
Valeriana officinalis - Real valerian. Common name, Valerian.
Small plants in the yard are captured using macro photography techniques
Zygaena occitanica moth close up, on a clover flower\n\nProvence burnet
Image of Larvae Spotted-winged Fly (Neotephritis finalis) on a yellow flower on nature background. Insect. Animal.
A flower-spike of Meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria) growing in its typically wet, boggy habitat in central Scotland in mid-summer. The species has a long history of herbal use, traditionally being used as an anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, diuretic, and tonic since ancient times in druidic England.
the beauty of wild grass flowers
Moth (probably a Six-spot Burnet) with red and black wings feeding on a Seat hrift flower in Pentire, Newquay, Cornwall on a June day.
Hawk moth - Hyles euphorbiae is a European moth of the family Sphingidae.
Butterfly Macro Stock Photo
Free Images: "bestof:Taenia solium1.jpg Taenia solium Taenia solium http //www archive org/stream/traitzoologiqu00brem page/n613/mode/2up XIX tabulae Anatomiam entozoorum"
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