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Grey Partridge / Perdix perdix
Beautiful grey partridge (Perdix perdix) standing in a meadow.
Eurasian Wryneck in wild environment
Taxon name: Eastern Tasmanian Striated Fieldwren\nTaxon scientific name: Calamanthus fuliginosus fuliginosus\nLocation: Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Squirrels eat mostly plants, seeds, nuts and will also eat insects and small vertebrates.
Large Skipper butterfly on Oregano flower.
Common gorse, ulex europaeus, yellow flowers, Freshwater, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, UK
an Iguana searches for food in the Nevada desert
Rock ptarmigan, lagopus muta, sitting on moorland in Icenalnd from side. Arctic bird looking on meadow in summer nature. Camouflaged grouse observing on field.
Crowing grey partridge (Perdix perdix) cockerel in the last sunlight.
A female Gambel's Quail behind some poppy flowers growing wild in the Superstition Wilderness area. Place: Phoenix, Arizona, United States. Date Taken: 3-19-13
A golden-mantled ground squirrel sits atop a rock, staring directly at the camera with an expression of cute annoyance, as if bothered by the photographers presence. The warm autumn hues in the background add a cozy seasonal feel to the image.
Common Blue or Polyommatus icarus, Small blue butterfly
Daisy Flower Background
blue diamond on the flower
Closeup of Oedemera nobilis
A lizard looks at me
Achillea millefolium, commonly known as White Yarrow or Common Yarrow, is a graceful perennial flower that produces an abundance of huge, flat clusters, packed with creamy-white flowers. They are born on tall stems atop an aromatic, green, fern-like foliage. Both flowers and foliage are attractive and long lasting, making White Yarrow a wonderful garden plant and a great choice for prairie or meadow plantings.\nIt is a rhizomatous, spreading, upright to mat-forming. Cultivars extend the range of flower colors to include pink, red, cream, yellow and bicolor pastels.
Moths on leaves in nature, North China Plain
A female Red Grouse (Lagopus lagopus scotica) rests among Heather in Speyside, in the Scottish highlands
Animals. A nimble Erhard's Wall Lizard (Podarcis erhardii naxensis) sits in a stones close-up against the backdrop of the sea on a spring day.
A meadow brown, or maniola jurtina butterfly ,on achillea
Macrophotography of medicinal plant (Sideritis angustifolia) cat's tail with small jumping spider in Sierra de Mariola natural park, Alcoy, Spain
Portrait of a male grey partridge
Red Grouse, Scientific name: Lagopus Lagopus. Close up of an alert male Red Grouse with red eyebrow, facing right in heather on managed grouse moorland.  Clean, green background.  Horizontal. Space for copy.
Sea Fennel (Crithmum maritimum) on a beach in Alghero. Province of Sassari. Sardinia. Italy.
Flowers of Tribulus terrestris. It is native to warm temperate and tropical regions of the Old World, and an invasive species in North America
Acanthocinus aedilis - long horned beetle - Siberian Timberman
White flowers in the sun
Pyrgus malvae, the grizzled skipper, is a butterfly species from the family Hesperiidae. It is a small skipper (butterfly) with a chequered pattern on its wings that appears to be black and white. This butterfly can be found throughout Europe and is common in central and southern regions of England. The butterfly prefers three major types of habitat: woodland, grassland, and industrial. Eggs are laid on plants that will provide warmth and proper nutrition for development, such as A. euphoria. As larvae, their movement is usually restricted to a single plant, on which they will build tents, unless they move onto a second host plant. Larvae then spin cocoons, usually on the last host plant they have occupied, where they remain until spring. Upon emerging as adult butterflies, grizzled skippers are quite active during the day and tend to favour blue or violet-coloured plants for food. They also possess multiple methods of communication; for example, vibrations are used to communicate with ants, and chemical secretions play a role in mating. Exhibiting territorial behaviour, males apply perching and patrolling strategies to mate with a desired female.\nHabitat: \nAlthough grizzled skippers occupy three major forms of habitats, they tend to settle in environments with spring nectar plants, larval food plants (agrimony, creeping cinquefoil, wild strawberry, tormentil), ranker vegetation, and edges with scrub or woodland. Host plants are from the family Rosaceae with a focus on Agrimonia eupatoria as well as Potentilla. \nFlight Season: \nGrizzled skippers produce one brood per season and are in flight from the middle of March to the middle of July. \n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Free Images: "bestof:20150812Scabiosa columbaria.jpg Tauben-Skabiose Scabiosa columbaria am Hohen List bei Schalkenmehren discovery place Schalkenmehren own AnRo0002 2015-08-12"
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