View allAll Photos Tagged Bug
Serangga ini tidak membantu pendebungaan secara langsung. Ia jenis perosak yang makan daun dan kelopak bunga sahaja.
A bug that I got just one shot of before it hopped off (is it some type of plant hopper?). Taken at Glen Brittle, Isle of Skye.
An itty-bitty on an itty bitty.
The Ladybug is associated with spirituality and religious devotion. The name Ladybug originated in Europe during the Middle Ages, when insects were destroying the crops. Catholic farmers were said to have prayed to the Virgin Mary for help. Soon after, Ladybugs appeared and began eating the pests and saved the crops from destruction. The farmers began to call the Ladybugs “the Beetles of Our Lady” and eventually they were known as Lady Beetles. The Ladybug's red wings are said to represent the Virgin's cloak and the black spots her joys and sorrows.
. . . just in case you wanted to know . . . '{)
HT Trail ~ Village of Oak Creek, AZ
A favourite bug to photo; so many people feel friendly toward ladybirds, it's totally endearing :) their bright red colour makes them a great subject.
Couldn't resist snapping this cute seven spot at my parents' house last weekend. When they saw this photo yesterday they told me the ladybird is still there! Must really love artichokes!
This photo was edited in Adobe Lightroom. Wanted to alter the colours slightly so gently messed with Lightroom's camera calibration colour sliders. Lots of fun! :)
In the excitement of new formats and layouts and introducing brand new exciting bugs for us to all admire, let's not forget some very very old bugs. It would be nice to be able to search images reliably by tag, but it's not possible, it seems. (In this case they really can't say that databases haven't synchronised properly after 2 months....)
To get to the above screen, just click the tag in the image, as you should to search for images by tag.
If you search in a different way (but still by tag)
www.flickr.com/search/?q=bfm0313&m=tags&ss=2&...
you will find there are 70 photos (only two of mine) that have this tag. So why does Flickr lie to us? Why is it impossible to search reliably by tag?
Love bug larvae grow up in grassy areas and feed on dead vegetation. The adult love bug does not eat, but subsists on the food taken in during its larval stage. Upon reaching maturity the love bug spends the entirety of its life copulating with its mate, hence its numerous romantic nicknames. The male and female attach themselves at the rear of the abdomen and remain that way at all times, even in flight. In fact, after mating, the male dies and is dragged around by the female until she lays her eggs
n Mexico some things seem to live forever, like old VW bugs. Also, on the walls, the butterflies never die... From my morning run. A long one. Today a worker I past fist bumped me. Out of the blue. ✌️
Bug, a species of Largidae. East Kunderang, Oxley Wild Rivers National Park, NSW, Australia, September 2015.
Steve @ Bug Lake (June 27)
This trip was doomed from the start. Pouring rain, and no intel regarding how far we’d get in a 2WD. Despite those warning signs Eric and Kim joined me for a trek into the unknown, to a place with a foreboding name.
The drive most of the way was wet, and muddy but mostly without incident save for a few logging trucks. However, about 4km from the trailhead we hit a rock obstacle and worked our way over, only to hit trees making further driving impossible. We got out and hoofed it.
The trailhead was almost impossible to find,.. but once we did and got past the first 200m, it became a decent trail, though steep and muddy,... and buggy. We climbed and climbed through what looked like moss and old growth and for some reason Kim got most of the bugs. We never did reach the lake due to the extra 4km each way and impact to our turn around time, we made it about 60% of the way up the actual trail. I’ve rarely been so soaked through my boots.
The unfortunate kicker is that this is one of my goal hikes to complete the 103 hikes book,... so I have to go back,.. when I do I’ll probably aim for better weather and bring a mountain bike.
Very big and creapy bugs, aiming at you when you had too much to drink!
Thanks to o'sorigami for the picture, because I didn't have my camera with me at the time I saw them...
Plenty of rooms available at the bug hotel in the grounds of St Peter and St Paul Church at West Mersea on Mersea Island in the County of Essex (UK).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_hotel
Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very kind permission.
When the VW new beetle was released as a concept car, there was such a clamor for this design that the company decided to make it as a production vehicle. During this time, VW drummed up interest in the vehicle through using the internet to give people something to see. As a part of the interest, they produced some fan items. This is a tie tack that shows the logo of the new beetle. I believe that it's a silver material that has tarnished over the years. Submitted for the weekly challenge for the flickr group Macro Mondays where the theme was "Metallic Surfaces."
Snapped with a Pentax K10D camera using the smc P-FA 50mm F1.4 lens with 62mm of extension tubes. PP with UFRaw to adjust color and saturation and resize from the raw file.
© Jim Gilbert 2015 all rights reserved
I've seen very few of these in recent years despite Large Milkweed Bugs being everywhere.
Robert Stahl natural area, NJ
Original Painting by ME: Stephani Fogel
More Artwork at: YoungGunArtist.com
ARTWORK FOR SALE: www.etsy.com/shop/TheGoodReverend
I honestly didn't see the bug when I took the photos. But there it is, plain as day. This is a composite of two stacks from the same set of images. Each stack had artifacts that the other didn't, so I blended them together.
© Jim Gilbert 2010 all rights reserved
Probably Green Stink Bug. On iris.
Leonard J. Buck Garden, Far Hills, NJ
When you see them up close like this, I'm glad the bug screens keep them on the outside. Shot with two lenses coupled (100mm macro +77mm prime)