Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Vivid insect on a flowering stem
Amphora sp. algae under microscopic view pattern, Diatoms, phytoplankton, fossils, silica, golden yellow algae
Cow parsley in a nature reserve
Plant Galls on a Oak Leaf, Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, Segovia, Castile Leon, Spain, Europe
beetle collection in XXXL size, beautiful colors and shapes.
Longitudinal section of a young pinecone showing internal structure, 10x magnification, hematoxylin stain.
The Kanuka (Kunzea ericoides) Tea Tree flower in bloom on a Tea Tree in differential focus.\n\nAlthough kanuka honey is not as well-known internationally as manuka, it actually contains more of the antiseptic properties than manuka. Both Manuka & Manuka honeys are thought to be so potent at healing infections that many hospitals around the world are now turning to them. New Zealand's plant life is to Kiwis, something that is iconically New Zealand. Many of these plants native environments are indigenous only to New Zealand/ Aotearoa.
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
plant Flower bud of Lilium brownii var.viridulum T.S.\nunder light mircoscope with white background
Stamp Ivory Coast with big beetle (Goliathus cassicus) value 65F, issue 1978
Sagina japonica on natural background
Insect in the box
Hairless, short to medium perennial; stems erect, square and hollow, with a creeping and rooting base. Leaf linear to lanceolate, opposite toothed or almost untoothed, half clasping the stem; with translucent gland-dots. Flowers white , veined and tinged with purplish-red. 10-18mm, tubular 2 lipped, the lower lip 3-lobed, borne in leafy racemes.\nHabitat: Wet places, meadows, marshes, river and stream banks, ditches.\nFlowering Season: May-October.\nDistribution: Belgium, Holland, France and Germany. From W and C Europe to W Asia.\n\nThis is a rare Species in the Netherlands. The Picture is made in my Garden Pond.\nThe Plant is Poisonous but in the past used as Herbal Medicine.
Algae under microscopic view, diatoms, green algae, Antarctic minke whales, Cocconeis, pattern background
Close up dry and old cicada shell on green leaf
A nice yellow insect wing isolated over white
Swathes of beautiful Bulbinella Hookeri flower in the Cobb Valley, Kahurangi National Park, in New Zealand's South Island. Named after Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker (born 1817), a world famous botanist who travelled on the Antarctic expedition of 1839 under the command of Sir James Ross. Bulbinella is a genus of plant in the family Xanthorrhoeaceae, first described as a genus in 1843. It is also known by the names Golden Wand, Maori Onion, Anthericum Hookeri, Chrysobactron Hookeri.
A closeup of light blue flowers on a blurred background in a garden
Buddleia flower background.
ascaris megalocephala cross section under the microscope showing its cuticle, intestine and ovaries - optical microscope x100 magnification
Photomicrograph of Volvox globator, a green algae in various stages of development. Dark green spots are daughter colonies forming inside of parent colony. Live specimen. Wet mount, 10X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination.
Striatella unipunctata algae under microscopic view, phytoplankton, fossils, silica, golden yellow algae
Short, creeping greyish, evergreen perennial forming mats, with erect flower stems. Leaves linear-cylindrical, 8-20mm, pointed, falling when dead. Flowers bright or pale yellow, 14-15mm, drooping in bud; petals often 7.\nHabitat: Rocky places, walls, stony pathways, to 2000m.\nFlowering Season: June-August.\nDistribution: North to S Scandinavia; naturalized in Britain and Ireland. W Europe to the Ukraine.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2006.
Set of insects isolated on a white background
white Queen Anne's lace flower against green background
Insect in the box
Two flower spikes of a perennial Capachito (Calceolaria thyrsiflora) growing in the foothills of the Andes near the capital Santiago. There are about 60 species of Calceolaria native to Chile, and several of the yellow-flowered species are called “Capachito” (from hooded Capuchin monks) by the local inhabitants and so are not distinguished by common names. In the English-speaking world the Calceolaria are often known as ‘slipper flower’ or ‘pocketbook flower’ because of their purse-shaped lower flower petals. This species is mostly restricted to central Chile.
Marine Life
Golden Pea,  Mountain Thermopsis, Thermopsis montana; Great Basin National Park, Nevada; Great Basin Deseert; Fabaceae Family.
Free Images: "bestof:Eupodotis caerulescens 1838.jpg « Otis caerulescens » Eupodotis caerulescens Blue Korhaan - adult male « Otis caerulescens » Eupodotis caerulescens Outarde"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day