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I wonder how many bugs there are in there.They are much needed and very nice to see.

Shield Bug affiinity Photo Stack finished in photoshop

Dock Bug (Coreus marginatus)

27 October 2017, Knowle

Overblown bug

 

Don't worry it's just a ventilation unit.

 

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Stink Bug was about 3/8" long

 

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On Wild field Scabious :)

Caught this Dragonfly over a fast moving stream.

Occasionally it would fly down for a bug and return to this spot.

Found on my outdoor chairs yesterday ; it was resting in the shade and a ugly fly indeed but beautiful when you get close. I think it might be a Robber Fly - Asilidae family. Redux for April 2019 "Eye of the beholder". Happy New Year and HMM to everyone!

Or stink bug. I had no idea these stink bugs went through instar stages! That's the cool thing about photography... it gets you to looking closer at the world around you and you find out interesting things! I think this bug is maybe 4th or 5th instar. These are the guys that put an end to my squash, tomatoes and cucumbers for the year. I don't know whether to be grateful to the little pests or dislike them more than I already do! LOL Have a wonderful day everyone!

Green shield bug (Palomena prasina) perched on a leaf.

 

Odorek zieleniak (Palomena prasina) siedzący na liściu.

This was snapped using a reversed mounted Minolta MD 28mm f3.5 lens

"down off my bird ladder", looking for friggen bugs......

Lady bug on new growth of the guava tree.

 

Color patterns are connected to their living quarters: generalists that live pretty much anywhere have fairly simple patterns of two strikingly different colors that they wear year round. Others that live in specific habitats have more complex coloration, and some can change color throughout the year. Specialist ladybugs use a camouflage coloration to match the vegetation when they're in hibernation and develop the characteristic bright colors to warn off predators during their mating season.

 

Have a happy day/evening

Oedemera nobilis

 

Canon EOS 5D Mark III

180mm

ƒ/13.0 180.0 mm 1/200 320

I'm not sure what kind of plant this is. And I'm not sure what kind of bugs these were. But I really like the colors in juxtaposition and the swarming of the little insects on this small leaves.

Some type of interesting shield bug that I photographed at Brookside Gardens in Maryland

Amegilla bee (digger bee) foraging on a Salvia microphylla (Baby Sage).

Got my first macro lens tonight :) With the low light conditions and just freehand made it rather difficult to keep in focus.

Pembroke, Ga.

Warmer spring weather brings out the bees and bugs

happy Halloween 🎃💓

Pyjamawants 210619(6xxxx) - soon bird shots will be featured here again but do not have the time to work on the RAW files yet

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I didn't know the milkweeds had their own bugs until I started shooting macros.

only as I adjusted focus did I see this tiny, tiny bug, blending in so well with it's Baeckea flower :)

In Grand Forks, ND

Canon EOS M50

TAMRON SP 90mm F/2.8 Di VC USD MACRO1:1 F017

ƒ/16.0 90.0 mm 1/160 250

Wheel Bug. Photographed in Maryland.

Focus stack of 3 images, shot with the camera hand held. Canon 80D, Canon MPE 65mm macro lens, Canon twin macro flash. Aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250, ISO 400.

One small step for a bug, one giant leap for bugkind

 

3984-62331

  

Post Focus

119 Bilder | 119 Images

 

Weiß jemand, was für eine Wanze das ist?

Does anyone know what kind of true bug this is?

Umngazzi, South Africa.

Pittosporum Bug (Pseudapines geminata) nymph

 

A different type of Pittosporum Bug, the first I have seen. It was on a leaf of our Pittosporum tree. Hopefully I will get to see an adult sometime, they are good looking bugs.

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