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A tick waits for its next victim on grass
Subject: Macro close-up top view of a Japanese Beetle isolated on white background.
Agapanthia villosoviridescens, also known as the golden-bloomed grey longhorn beetle, south Ukraine
Ectobius vittiventris Amber Wood Cockroach Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
bug on green leaf in the wild nature. macro. A bug life
Group of beetles in white background XXXL size.
Canadian burnet (Sanguisorba canadensis) with longhorn beetle in a Connecticut flower garden, summer
small beetle
Detailed Illustration of a Japanese Beetle
Wild carrot bloom with a June bug (Cotinis nitida).  Also known as Queen Anne's Lace, bird's nest, and bishop 's lace. Daucus carota.
Close-up shot of the green rose chafer (Cetonia aurata) with open wings on a white blossom of a plant in sunlight
A beetle on the edge of the grass.
Flowers of marsh marigold and beetle
Big Green and Yellow Grasshopper in Grass, Thailand
Blackspotted longhorn beetle aka Rhagium mordax on leaf. Devon, UK.
red striped bugs
Click beetle on grass
Protaetia (Acanthoprotaetia) beetle - yellow background.
Soldier beetle, Cantharis rustica with dew resting on a straw in early morning, closeup photo.
Athous haemorrhoidalis Click Beetle Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
The raspberry beetle (Byturus tomentosus), two beetles eat pollen on white flowers, southern Ukraine
Bugs fighting.
Soft-snouted flower beetle Malachite beetle Malachius bipustulatus crawls on the grass.
The speckled bush-cricket (Leptophyes punctatissima) is a flightless species of bush-cricket that occurs across most of Europe.\nDescription:\nThe grass-green body, which is about 15 millimetres long, carries minute black specks, as reflected in the common and Latin name of the species; in addition, the dorsal surface of the abdomen features a brown stripe; this is more pronounced in the male. A yellow-white stripe extends backwards from the eyes. The lower legs and feet are brownish. The antennae are twice as long as the body. The species is brachypterous: the male's forewings are reduced to small flaps, and those of the female are even more reduced. The hindwings are completely absent, and both males and females are flightless.\n The female's ovipositor is laterally compressed and curves sharply upwards. The song of the male, produced by rubbing the right wing against a tooth-like projection at the base of the left, is short (1 to 10 ms) and feeble; at a frequency of 40 kHz, it can best be heard with the aid of a bat detector. Unlike other cricket species, the female is able to respond to the male's calls with a weaker call of her own, which attracts the male to her. The speckled bush-cricket is quite a common species, but its colouring and secretive lifestyle, hidden away in the undergrowth, mean that it often passes unnoticed. \nDistribution:\nThe speckled bush-cricket is common across much of Europe – it ranges from the British Isles, France and Belgium in the west to the European parts of Russia in the east, and from southern Scandinavia in the north to southern Italy, Bulgaria and Greece; it has been recorded as far south as Palestine (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis nice Cricket was photographed in my Garden Pond in September 2020.
Carabidae insect live on green leaves
Shieldbug beetle in extreme close up.
Colorfull bug at green grass
Bibio marci Female Hawthorn Fly Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Beetle Epicometis hirta collects pollen on white flowers of the Heracleum. Macro footage.
Insect Specimens: Colorful Beetle
Free Images: "bestof:Carex spp Sturm55.jpg 1 Carex binervis Sm <br />2 Carex punctata Gaudin ;Original Caption 1 Leisten-Segge Carex binervis Sm <br />2 Punkt-Segge Carex punctata"
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