View allAll Photos Tagged FlyTrap

"Look scary!," she says...

But then she turns the pic all poppy and ghey instead, hah!

 

Model: Lucifer Fulci (Wormfood/Penis Flytrap)

This is a macro shot of my Venus Flytrap. For some reason, only 1 of the 3 pots have turned red inside.

Venus flytrap anemone (Actinoscyphia saginata). 498 m depth. Mogán, Gran Canaria, Spain. Canary Islands Oceana Ranger Expedition. September 2009.

 

Anemona atrapamoscas (Actinoscyphia saginata). 498 metros de profundidad. Mogán, Gran Canaria, España. Expedición Oceana Ranger a las Islas Canarias. Septiembre 2009.

 

Copyright: All images and text on this Flickr® account belong to Oceana. Any questions or requests regarding image use should be sent to asaez@oceana.org and/or digicomms@oceana.org

This little guy captured 3 gnats all by itself.

Violet Winterborne has bought a new home.

Among the sound of the shore, the wash and Seagulls wheeling in the sky, there are creaks, and echoes and scratches.

Will Violet step inside, or is it already too late.

My Graduation film produced on the BA Top Up Animation course at the London College of Communication (LCC) 2013.

 

The credits have been cut off early for some reason.

Here are the full credits of the wonderful people who helped make the film:

 

Sound Design and Composition - Paul Freeman

Paintings - Natalie Todd

Costumer - Brenna Eaves

Assistant Model-maker - Katie Single

 

Check out it's production on my blog: redhairedtweed.blogspot.co.uk

 

By National Geographic at the Cloud Forest, Gardens by the Bay.

Latest addition to my home

The three trigger hairs on each half of the leaf are visible here. The trap will shut when any two hairs are touched.

Juvenile Scotophaeus blackwalli on venus flytrap.

 

(Invasive spider on potted plant)

 

The trap is not quite mature, and the plant is very stressed from not being watered during our vacation.

Kingdom: Plantae

Phylum: Magnoliophyta

Class: Magnoliopsida

Order: Nepenthales

Family: Droseraceae

Genus: Dionaea

Species: Dioneaea muscipula

 

Auburn University Arboretum, Auburn, Alabama, USA

 

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Welcome to my Flickr 365 Project! I’m calling it my 365 Species Project, because for each day of the year, I will post a photo of a different species of organism... My goal was to accomplish all of this in 2013, but I soon found out that it was more daunting a task than I'd realized. Instead, my new goal is to get through 365 by the end of 2014, still an impressive average of a new species every other day for two years.

 

We're in the home stretch, now!!! It's December, which means I'm down to my last 31 days to get it all done in 2 years. Somewhat unfortunately, I'm getting slammed at the end of my first semester in graduate school, so the project has really dropped toward the bottom of the old priority list. Nonetheless, I'm going to do my best to get them all in under the wire. Excuse the massive posts!

 

A Venus flytrap (Dionaea musciiplula) showing how it earned its name. Photo by Sarah Schmidt.

macro photography, these seedlings are only a few millimeters across at the moment.

She's eating well this year!!

Verkar faktiskt som att den här Venus flugfällan jag köpte gör sitt jobb.

Canon T2i

EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM

Exposure 1/100 sec at f /2.8

Focal Length 45mm

ISO 400

 

The Flytraps Live @ Zoeys Cafe on July 31st, 2011

This may be the result of a leaf pulling from my "Petite Dragon"

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