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Photomicrograph of rotifer, probably Rotaria rotatoria. Rapidly rotating cilia at top of head, internal organs visible. Green circles are algae. Live specimen. Original image at 40X, wet mount, transmitted brightfield illumination. Indistinct image due to motion blur of live specimen and very shallow depth of field of brightfield illumination.
Microscopic photo of a thin section of calcareous tufa of Holocene age.
Demodex folliculorum - parasitic mite on the eyelashes of a human eye, microscope
Cheyletiella blakei Mite - Small Cat pest view under a microscope
Abstract rock surface with highly unstable macro shapes in brownish gray on a blurred black background
Plant tissue, photo taken in the laboratory under a microscope
Freshwater aquatic zooplankton and algae under microscope view
Small, cryptic, bizarre insect; pest of specific plant species.  Pictured here on Mexican Sunflower (Tithonia diversifolia)
Alternaria spore was zoom by transmission electron microscope. Alternaria is a genus of ascomycete fungi. Alternaria species are known as major plant pathogens.
honeybee worker leg composite W.M. under light microscope with white background
frigánea, Caddisfly larvae under the water in the built home. Trichoptera. (Caddisfly).River habitat
Papuan Scorpionfish Scorpaenopsis papuensis occurs in the tropical Pacific Ocean from Indonesia and the Philippines to the Society Islands, north to the Ryukyu Islands, south to the Great Barrier Reef and Fiji in a depth range from 1-40m, max. length 25cm, common 20cm. Scorpion fishes rarely swim, but rather move along the bottom propelling themselves with their fins. As ambush hunters, they use the camouflage as a hunting skill to prey on unsuspecting fish and invertebrates. The outline of Scorpionfishes often disappears almost completey. This is a part of the left pectoral fin with sophisticated camouflage pattern. \nTriton Bay, Indonesia, 3°54'2.544 S 134°6'23.862 E at 9m depth by night.
Tardigrade (water bear) isolated from moss. Microscopic picture, 40 times magnified.
Chiton, Tripoplax regularis. on a rock at Salt Point State Park in Sonoma County, California.
Lacy Scorpionfish - Rhinopias aphanes at a coral reef. Underwater world of Papua New Guinea, Milne Bay.
Monotomidae, Coleoptera Fossil in Burmese amber of Cenomanian era, 100 million years ago, from the state of Myanmar, extreme macro shot
Close up Plant epidermis with stomata or Leaf Epidermis (Stomata) under microscope.
Pleurotus ostreatus, the oyster mushroom growing on oak tree trunk.
Ghosty white gray Japanese Himeshirokobuzomushi weevil (Dermatoxenus caesicollis) on dead leaves in the forest (Wildlife closeup macro photograph)
Cheyletiella blakei Mite - Small Cat pest view under a microscope
Cristarmadillidium muricatum Isopod in pill form on substrate
Photomicrograph of one celled amoeba. Live specimen. Wet mount, 40X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination.
Low tide allowing for some algae photography on a dock
Grape caulerpa (Caulerpa cylindracea) on the rhizome of the seagrass posidonia oceanica in the French Mediterranean Sea
Ganoderma applanatum
Colonial Ascidian Didemnum psammatodes is native to Northern Australia and other tropical and subtropical regions in the Indo-West Pacific in a depth range from 1-15m. \nThe species is introduced to the Atlantic where it was first recorded in Guadeloupe in 1980-1981. Since then it has been reported in several areas, probably transported to the Atlantic through shipping and hull fouling.\nThe scattered large exhalant openings are distinctive for that species. As a filter feeder, Didemnum psammatodes is not eating but just overgrowing the coral. \nTriton Bay, West Papua Province, Indonesia, \n3°54'3.384 S 134°6'26.448 E at 16m depth
Female of a Glow Worm (Dorsal Side) Location: Agumber
The aggregating anemone, Anthopleura elegantissima, or clonal anemone, is the most abundant species of sea anemone found on rocky Pacific coast of North America. This cnidarian hosts endosymbiotic algae called zooxanthellae.  Salt Point State Park, California.
Microzooplankton under microscopic view, zooplankton
Oniscus asellus Common Woodlouse. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
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