View allAll Photos Tagged MacroNature
Vor einigen Tagen ist mir zum ersten Mal eine Zoropsis spinimana begegnet. Ehrlich gesagt hatte ich mir die Tiere nach dem ganzen Medienrummel deutlich größer vorgestellt. Ich habe die Gelegenheit gleich genutzt, um meine neue Kamera zu testen.
Das Bild ist ein Stack aus 52 Aufnahmen. Nachdem ich sie fotografiert hatte, wurde die Spinne wieder in die Freiheit entlassen.
Kamera: Olympus OMD EM1-X
Objektiv: Olympus 60mm f/2.8 Makro
Delicate and ephemeral, Gaura lindheimeri dances in the breeze like a cloud of tiny butterflies. This close-up reveals the charm behind its common name—“Whirling Butterflies.” Native to North America but at home in gardens worldwide, this flower offers both grace and grit, thriving where other blooms would bow.
Détails (écailles) d'une aile de papillon Uranus ripheus (Madagascar). Focus stack de 38 images. Appareil Canon M5. Adaptateur de monture Canon EF-EOS M. Objectif Tamron SP 60mm F/2 Macro Di II avec tubes d'extension 68mm, ISO 100, F/8.0. Macro Slider Rail XILETU LCB-16M. Éclairage Ulanzi VL49.
Alongside the use of the web to capture other prey, the spiders are also cannibals and prey on each other. However, this only happens before, during or after sexual activity.
"After Covid a brave new world will emerge like a drop in the ocean masked by our tears of sadness and joy and new awareness".
i'm not sure if this is a damsel bug nymph or what, but the kids thought it looks like a dragon and that's good enough for me despite the super-long antennae and hind legs...
backyard capture in chesterfield
update from august: my guess is that this is in the katydid family, based on the length of the hind legs and the small wings, which i’m noticing as prominent on several katydid encounters over the summer