View allAll Photos Tagged Nymph

Possible Scudder’s Bush Katydid nymph. Tettigoniidae are commonly called katydids, bush crickets or long-horned grasshoppers. More than 6,400 species are known. Body length of this specimen is about 1.4cm. Flower is 'Aloha' Calibrachoa, about 2.5cm diameter. They are evergreen short-lived perennials. Photo is from my garden. By the way, the nymph devoured the entire flower in one day!

The Jungle Nymph, or Heteropteryx dilatata, is the heaviest of all stick insect and is also known as the giant thorny phasmid. It is very large, brightly green in color (females) and can live up to 2 years. Heteropteryx dilatata occurs naturally in Malaysia.

This species is not long and thin like people often expect from a stick insect. The males and females are totally different, they even seem a different species.

The adult females are bright green, very large and have a very wide body. The males are long and slender and are brown with beige in color.

 

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on alcea rosea which seems to be their favourite plant.

In the Comox valley.

And here's another one - the nymphs seem to really like these roses.

Created for the Magnificent Manipulated Masterpieces

125th MMM "DOUBLE EXPOSURE EFFECT" Challenge

 

The Mangrove Tree Nymph is a large butterfly, with a wingspan usually exceeding 130mm and often reaching 150mm or more. It displays the aposematic black and white colours like the other species of its genus. It features large black spots on both wings where the marginal and submarginal black spots are conjoined to form an irregular black band. The post-discal triangular spots on the hindwings are large and always touching the black veins, forming a jagged black band. The wing bases are yellow tinted.

A long exposure on a windy morning

I saw these two on a guara stem. For days now the guara plants have been hosting many of these weird little critters...

I think these nymph butts are pretty striking - Happy Beautiful Bug Butt Thursday!

Pic taken by Chrys Mcauley at Sunny's Studio.

 

Nature park in the Comox Valley

I've gotten a lot of shots out of my wife's little purslane flowers - their colors and the fine structure in the middle make them fun macro subjects. I was lucky here to find this guy strolling through one...

Always a delight to find these gorgeous nymphs! These are 4th instars.

Brown Moss - Shropshire

.::She Sings The Song Of Bliss::.

 

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Made a little water nymph for funsies to wear around Origins of Sin! I had a lot of fun putting this one together and love how she came out!

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.::Details::.

Outfit: Merusine Set from Petrichor

Hair: Yomi

Eye Overlay: Psycho Pills

Eyes: Aviglam

Body: Legacy

Head: Lelutka!

 

Sa douce fragilité m' a fait penser à de la porcelaine

 

Photo prise à Sône, au jardin des fontaines pétrifiées, un site magnifique qui vaut le détour !

Locust nymph in its final instar before being able to fly. They go through 4 or 5 instars and during the last one they get wings. This one shows the beginning of wing growth.

 

Ghana

 

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Have a fabulous day, everyone...

in a seed head! Love both so the perfect combo for me! ;-)

Chalais - Charente - France

Figuring out the assassin thing...

I didn't realize what I was seeing here until I got it on the computer screen. Assassin bug nymphs "develop through five molts (instars) into adults in about two months." Since this one appears to have fully developed wings, I'm thinking this may be the final molt. Anyway, kind of a bizarre scene down in the mistflower leaves...a fresh and shiny "new" assassin bug...

 

extensionentomology.tamu.edu/insects/assassin-bug/

In the Comox Valley,

Michelle hair by Magika

Laura gown by Sofia

Eness Bracelets by Heartsdale Jewellery

 

.collection Alison pose set by La Plume

 

Photo taken at Forbidden Colors

Spain; Calblanque, Murcia 3/6/22

 

Big thanks to Simon Oliver for correcting my identification

Conocephalus discolor, also called Conocephalus fuscus. The Long-Winged Conehead.

 

Amazingly i found several Conehead nymphs in the garden last summer.

 

This is a female nymph, very small.

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