View allAll Photos Tagged Pollinators
Small creatures travel from plant to plant carrying pollen on their bodies sustain our ecosystems by helping plants reproduce.
vecchia foto, pochi insetti quest'anno, sul mio balcone e non :(
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Did you see 👀 the spider on the bee? (Better in Large)
"Handle a book as a bee does a flower, extract its sweetness but do not damage it.” ― John Muir.
Thanks for your visit and taking the time to comment so I can visit your photos, too... very much appreciated! Have a great day!
Found this Hunt's Bumblebee in a great position for a portrait. I only find these beauties in the Western part of Nebraska. It was quite a treat to find a few during our last trip.
Not sure if this is a Carnolian or Italian Honey Bee at work on the sunflower. They are the two predomiant honey bees used in this area. View large to see pollin on the body.
A small bee collecting pollen from a Sneezeweed wildflower, best viewed large.
Thank you all so much for your visits, faves and comments. Have a great day and weekend!
This morning on my way to take pics of my favorite ospreys, I ran into this pollinator field. I never made it to the ospreys.
European Wasp (Vespula germanica)
Apologies for posting a Euro Wasp two days in a row but there wasn't much else around in the garden today. It was busy flying from flower to flower on the Ivy. I didn't want to get too close so this image has been cropped.
Happy Wing Wednesday!
UBC Botanical Garden, at the University of British Columbia, was established in 1916 under the directorship of John Davidson, British Columbia's first provincial botanist. It is the oldest botanical garden at a university in Canada.
This bee, most likely Leafcutting bee, Megachile sp., has a flat abdomen and it seems that it collects the pollen on the hairs of its abdomen and not in baskets as the honey bees.
TWU Butterfly Garden in Denton, North Texas
Saturday Self Challenge - photographing a bee.
Spotted when I was walking Ross at Coombe Hill yesterday, there were several bees pollinating the thistles. I took several photos, this was the best one
African Carder Bee (Pseudoanthidium repetitum)
It initially seemed there wasn't any insects around the garden today. So I spent some time, which is unusual for me to do, and then there seemed to be insects and spiders everywhere!
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without
my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Explore Sep. 30, 2009 #488
Great pollinators, it is fantastic to see them very close with our macro lenses. usually very busy to care while we photograph them, but you always have to be careful specially if you don't know if you allergic to them.
Something awesome:
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Photography is my passion, and nature photography is my favorite.
I have been in Explore for more that a hundred times, and it is an awesome experience to have your photos showcased in such a special way.
I'm in many groups, and I only add my photos to them if they are not private.
I thank your for coming today, for leaving a comment, and make a favorite of yours this photo, (if that is the case) thanks again!
The best part of this forum is the contacts and friends that I have made over the years, that have the same passion for this art that is called photography!
Martha,
"If the bee disappears from the surface of the earth, man would have no more than four years to live." - Albert Einstein
Hmmm...I wonder how true that is. Long ago..probably true. Nowadays...who knows? Yes, bugs could be pesky, but we don't realize how important some are. Like this little bumblebee, busy collecting pollen, unknowingly pollinating this female pumpkin flower. The bees and other bugs do a fantastic job pollinating every year...I even get some pretty fascinating cross-pollinated pumpkins and gourds. Only rarely is there a slow morning insect-wise that gets me to go out and hand-pollinate.
Time to go catch up! Have a wonderful Wednesday, my friends!