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Лист багрема у пролеце.Стоцк пхото
butterfly on the flower
Dragon-fly, view from above, blue - black, big, sitting on a rock, wings spreaded out, USA, Kenai Peninsula
a damselfly sitting on a leaf
Pink Ammania plant, Ammannia gracilis, with blossoms.
Blue Butterfly Macro
A male migrant hawker hanging from a bramble in the English countryside.
Tot 35-44mm, Ab 20-30mm, Hw 24-30mm.\nOne of the larger Sympetrum species. In the field, males may be noticed because they seldom become as deeply red as other species and have a rather parallel-sided abdomen.\nHabitat: Wide range of places, especially preferring warm, stagnant waters. These are often shallow and bare, this species being a pioneer of newly created ponds. Occasionally in flowing or brackish water.\nFlight Season: May be seen all year in the Mediterranean. In Northern Europe, appears from early June, becoming abundant in July and flying into November. One of the last dragonflies to be encountered in autumn.\nDistribution: Common in most of our area, becoming less common relative to S. vulgatum in a north-easterly direction. Extends to Japan. Migrations are often seen and are sometimes massive.\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands.
An Eastern Tiger Swallowtail in Dover, Tennessee
Сhionanthus virginicus - also called: 'Virginischer Schneeflockenstrauch' / 'Virginischer Schneebaum' or 'Giftesche'
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
The most common of hawker dragonflies and can be seen in good numbers when emerged and on the wing into late autumn
photo of green fly on plant stem. selective focus
Maianthemum dilatatum (snakeberry, two-leaved Solomon's seal or false lily of the valley) is a common rhizomatous perennial flowering plant that is native to western North America from northern California to the Aleutian islands, and Asia across the Kamchatka Peninsula, Japan, and Korea. It grows in coastal temperate rainforests, and is often the dominant groundcover plant in Sitka Spruce forests.
Linaria vulgaris common toadflax yellow wild flowers flowering on the meadow, small plants in bloom in the green grass
Tot 35-40mm, Ab 26-33mm, Hw 20-25mm.\nOften occurs with L. sponsa, with which is easily confused. Typically occurs in lower numbers, but can be more abundant in sites that are only seasonally wet.\nOccurrence:\nRange similar to L. sponsa, but relatively more common  southward Europe and typically more localized and less numerous than that species in most of its northern range. Our only Lestes that also occurs in North America.\nHabitat:\nA wide variety of still waters, which typically dry out in the course of summer or have shallow borders providing warm micro-habitats for the larvae. Sites usually have dense growths of rushes or sedges, e.g. dune lakes, reedy shallows, small meadow ponds or edges of bogs.\nFlight Season:\nThe earliest Lestes in most areas, emerging from late May in northern Europe, most abundant in July and August, with the last record in October.\n\nThis is a less common Lestes species, than L sponsa in the Netherlands.
Nose-Horned Viper male in natural habitat (Vipera ammodytes)
Catfish
butterfly on the flower
Oemleria cerasiformis.\n\nWhite flowers dangle from the plant stem of the Osoberry in springtime. West Coast forest in southwestern British Columbia, Canada.
A closeup of the beautiful Japanese andromeda
Leaves of a Lenga (Nothofagus, or Southern Beech) at Lago Roca in Tierra del Fuego National Park.
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
A spring germinated annual, rather like M. altissima, but the flowers white, slightly smaller, 4-5mm, the standard petal longer than the wings and keel. Pod 3-5mm, hairless, greyish brown when ripe.\nHabitat: Open places, especially on arable land and fields, in waste places and alongroadsides, a fairly frequent weed or ruderal, to 1850m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Widespread through Europe, more local or rare in Holland and Scandinavia; naturalized in Britain and Belgium.
Linaria vulgaris blooms in the wild among grasses
The Black-tailed Skimmer is a narrow-bodied dragonfly that can be seen flying low over the bare gravel and mud around flooded gravel pits and reservoirs.
Callophrys rubi on the flower
Great Blue Skimmer (Female)
A closeup shot of white Ixora flower species on a bush with wet leaves
Abstract leaves very shallow DOF.
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