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Blue Butterfly Macro
Small lake form of European perch. Place fishing stated in geotagging file
close up on fossil fish in the rock
This small butterfly is a Juniper Hairstreak. It was photographed at the H.E. Flanagan Prairie in Western Arkansas in mid-July. It is feeding on Rattlesnake Master.
Detailed view of a patterned moth at rest; demonstrating wing design and texture. Captured in Natural Habitat, Wulai, New Taipei City.
Closed up Compound eyes of butterfly.
Dingy skipper Erynnis tages butterfly pollinating in purple blooming lavender flowers.
Close up of umber skipper, Poanes melane, feeding on stevia, Stevia rebaudiana. Sunnyvale, California, USA.
Meal moth and in the background  pupal exuvium after ecdysis, moulting.
Anania hortulata, the small magpie, is a species of moth of the family Crambidae. It is found in Europe and North America. \nThe wingspan is 24–28 millimeters. The head and thorax are deep ochreous-yellow, black-spotted. Forewings are yellowish-white, markings blackish ; base blackish, with two ochreous-yellow marks ; a suffused costal streak ; lines thick, first irregular, second tending to form spots, curved, narrowest below middle ; small orbicular and large round discal spots, touching costal streak ; a terminal fascia tending to form spots, edge parallel to second line. Hind wings with colour, second line, and terminal fascia as in forewings ; a blackish discal spot. The larva is whitish ; dorsal line dull green, white-edged ; head and plate of 2 black. \nThe moth flies from June to July depending on the location. \nThe larvae feed on Stachys, mint and nettle (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Side view of a Common Swift, Hepialus lupulinus against, white background
This Gray Hairstreak butterfly was photographed feeding on Rattlesnake Master in the H.E. Flanagan Prairie in Western Arkansas.
The coral reef fish on white background, isolated .
Black butterfly spreading wings on leaf.
Adult Male Lovebug Insect of the Genus Plecia
Common brown butterfly feeding on a wild flower
Fossil Ammonite isolate background with clipping pathFossil Ammonite isolate background with clipping path: SONY A7
Bivalvia Fossil inside a limestone rock on moss floor. Gastropods from the jurassic period captured during autumn season.
Landed on wood
Freshwater Bass on White Background
fresh raw cold seafood gelama fillet cut grey whole fish ikan head tail on white ice background halal food cuisine hyper market menu for restaurant ingredient design
Gastrotricha, Biological Classification: Phylum seen under Microscope. They are commonly referred to as Hairy backs. They live on and in between particles of Sediment on the seabed floor. There are nearly 809 species that are either Freshwater or Seawater Creatures
...an old Spanish coin, a means of payment from the Iberian Peninsula made of metal
Aspergillus fumigatus is one of the most common Aspergillus species to cause disease in individuals with an immunodeficiency. This pathogen primarily causes invasive infection in the lung.
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
The Small Tortoiseshell is one of our most-familiar butterflies, appearing in gardens throughout the British Isles.
Mottled Beauty (Alcis repandata) Geometridae camouflaged on oak, macro photo
Butterfly on a leaf looking for food.
Butterfly Were blue wall Home
Miltochrista miniata, the rosy footman, is a moth of the family Erebidae. The species was first described by Johann Reinhold Forster in 1771. It is found in the temperate parts of the Palearctic realm – Europe, Asia Minor, Caucasus, northern Kazakhstan, southern Siberia, Amur, Primorye, Sakhalin, southern Kuriles, Heilongjiang, Liaoning, Hebei, Inner Mongolia, Shanxi, Sichuan, Korea and Japan, but may be replaced by Miltochrista rosaria in the eastern Palearctic.\nDescription:\nThe wingspan is 23–27 mm. Tannish-peach ground colour, rose-red margin to the forewing, and on this wing a black dentate line beyond the middle, and black, elongate spots before the margin. In the male the costa is curved upwards beyond the apex of the cell.\nBiology:\nThe moth flies from June to September depending on the location. Often occurs singly, in broadleaf and mixed forests, on moors, at road-side ditches, on umbellifers or scabious. \nEgg oval, yellow. Larva grey, with blackish head, with long and dense hairs, hibernating, until June on lichens on walls and fences. The caterpillars feed on lichen. Pupa black-brown, abdomen with yellow incisions, in a cocoon densely intermixed with hairs (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Free Images: "bestof:Megaera.jpg Graphium megaera Seitz Macrolepidoptera 1910 of plate Unknown PD-old The Macrolepidoptera of the World - derivative Graphium megaera"
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