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Mother of pearls underwater. Closed sea shell underwater self-luminous from the inside. Oysters and pearls on the underwater sandy seabed. Sunlight beams and shine through water. 3D Illustration
The small butterfly flies rapidly & erratically. Relatively rare in Singapore, and usually missed by casual observers.
Santiago de Compostela, Spain - November 28, 2021: Photo of a stone mollusk shell on the wall of St. James Cathedral, a symbol of pilgrims and the Camino de Santiago
Clausiliidae Door Snail. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Tropical beaches destroyed by human rubbish and vandalism global warming and ignorance Asia
A very close and very ferocious looking Japanese beetle
Clam shell partially buried on black sand beach
Fully Open Clam on Atlantic (Boston) Beach Close-Up
abstract background with golden shells
Marine Lighthouse\nLima, Peru
Sea snail Tritia neritea eating the remains of Mediterranean limpet (Patella caerulea) on sea bottom, Aegean Sea, Greece, Halkidiki
Springtime California, Rincon Beach Carpinteria
Coenobita clypeatus
Scraptiidae, false flower beatle (Coleoptera). Baltic amber, Eocene, approximately 56 - 34 million years ago. Image taken with extreme macro and focus stacking technique.
Living creature shells from the tidal flat
Aquatic snail Tylomelania - Poso Rabbit Snail
A Hermit Crab - Clibanarius aequabilis
Living coquina clams buried  in the sand at the beach in Ocracoke.
Zebra mussels, Dreissena polymorpha, grown on a painters mussel, in sandy sediment and shallow water.
a fly larva clings to a roack in the Middle Fork of the Flathead River, Montana
Barnacles grow on coastal rocks in North China
Common Land Snail of the Genus Corona
insect
Hermit Crab or Paguroidea in a shell on tropical beach, close up sea life.
The beach of Marina di Castagneto is one of the most beautiful and natural beaches in Tuscany located on the Etruscan coast.
Extreme magnification - Fly paw at microscope, 50x magnification
Stock photo showing close-up view of the glossy, textured reptile scales of the skin of an Indian python snake. This reptile is also known as the Asian rock python, black-tailed python or Indian rock python.
Clausiliidae, also known by their common name the door snails
The hummingbird hawk-moth (Macroglossum stellatarum) is a species of hawk moth found across temperate regions of Eurasia. The species is named for its similarity to hummingbirds, as they feed on the nectar of tube-shaped flowers using their long proboscis while hovering in the air; this resemblance is an example of convergent evolution. \nLife cycle:\nTwo or more broods are produced each year. The adult may be encountered at any time of the year, especially in the south of the range, where there may be three or four broods. It overwinters as an adult in a crevice among rocks, trees, and buildings. On very warm days it may emerge to feed in mid-winter. Unlike other moths, they have no sexual dimorphism in the size of their antennal lobes.\nHabitat and host plants:\nHummingbird hawk-moths can be easily seen in gardens, parks, meadows, bushes, and woodland edge, where the preferred food plants grow (honeysuckle, red valerian and many others). \nTheir larvae usually feed on bedstraws or madders (Rubia) but have been recorded on other Rubiaceae and Centranthus, Stellaria, and Epilobium. \nAdults are particularly fond of nectar-rich flowers with a long and narrow calyx, since they can then take advantage of their long proboscis and avoid competition from other insects. Flowers with longer tubes typically present the feeding animal a higher nectar reward. Proboscis length is thought to have been evolutionarily impacted by the length of flower feeding tubes.] Examples of such plants include Centranthus, Jasminum, Buddleia, Nicotiana, Primula, Viola, Syringa, Verbena, Echium, Phlox, and Stachys. \nDistribution:\nThe hummingbird hawk-moth is distributed throughout the northern Old World from Portugal to Japan, but it breeds mainly in warmer climates (southern Europe, North Africa, and points east). Three generations are produced in a year in Spain. \n\nThis Picture is made in my Garden in Summer 2023.
Free Images: "bestof:Naturalis Biodiversity Center - ZMA.MOLL.414671 - Lima spec. - Limidae - Mollusc shell.jpeg artwork Dimensions artwork Document type Limidae Lima Individual"
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