View allAll Photos Tagged bugs

I think it's more of a dust mite looking at him close-up!

Do birds watch bugs the same way people watch birds? In case you are thinking the goldfinch wants to eat the bee, they don’t eat insects, only nuts and seeds.

 

Thanks for your views, faves and comments! They are so much appreciated!

 

Taken at the Steenbras pump station, Gordon's Bay, Western Cape,South Africa.

These could be Monkey beetles...not sure.

Canon EOS M50

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

ƒ/14.0 90.0 mm 1/200 125

With the temperature starting to rise (15-17°C (59-63°F), the Spring Flowers starting to bloom and some rain (about 18mm or 3/4 inch) over the past 10 days we are starting to see some insect life in the garden.

Spider web, full of Bug's..

This Bug would change Color's, when the Light would change.

straight-out-of-the-camera

Santa Rita Prickly Pear Cactus blossom and a bug. Southwest Arizona, USA. Full frame. Dedicated macro lens. No crop. No post processing.

 

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A small bug (shield bug?) clinging to the edge of a backlit Sunflower petal.

Kodak Portra 400 Film ~ Canon AE-1P 28mm f/2.8

Dock Bug (Coreus marginatus)

27 October 2017, Knowle

Pentatoma rufipes belongs to the Pentatomidae family and has a length of 12 - 15 mm. It is thus one of the largest bugs in Central Europe. The species is abundant and occurs throughout Europe and northern Asia. Adults can be found near forests and parks from July until November.

Overblown bug

 

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

 

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Canon EOS 5DS R

TAMRON 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD A010

ƒ/13.0 300.0 mm 1/320 1250

On Wild field Scabious :)

Harlequin Bug Nymph. Photographed in Maryland.

Single frame. Canon 80D, Canon MPE lens, Canon twin flash, Aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250, ISO 400.

Looking close... on Friday! - Bugs & Co

  

Kimbra - Stuff I Don't Need ft. BANKS

youtu.be/EedgoPYnH_0?si=gTmpDDv1oEn5haVf

Two skipper butterflies sharing a flower

 

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

 

Odorek zieleniak (Palomena prasina) siedzący na liściu.

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!

VW Bug in front of an old large barn.

Rural Indiana

Taken in 1972. Camera-Kodak Brownie Flash 20

Film-Kodak Safety roll, 160 format

 

Story;

Took this on a Family trip in July(?) 1972. We were doing the Indiana covered bridges. The camera used was just a "used" Kodak Brownie Flash 20. Basically, this was the start of my photo interests.

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

Birds are out looking for Yummy Bugs.

Oedemera nobilis

 

Canon EOS 5D Mark III

180mm

ƒ/13.0 180.0 mm 1/200 320

Stink bug on my cucumber plants.

Fall bugs are so much easier to shoot....they're cold and just sit there.

 

Exposure: 0.025 sec (1/40)

Aperture: f/2.7

Focal Length: 5.2 mm

ISO Speed: 250

Exposure Bias: -1 EV

Flash: Flash did not fire

Canon EOS 5DS R

TAMRON 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD A010

ƒ/13.0 300.0 mm 1/320 500

Warmer spring weather brings out the bees and bugs

Pembroke, Ga.

France; Brenne, Lignac 17/5/20. Faint orange midline on the pronotum

A few days ago I sat on a meadow and waited for butterflies when I noticed a beetle under the umbel of what I think is a Queen Anne's lace. I wonder if it was hiding from the barn swallows which were out in mass that morning. That would be quite clever for a bug.

Canon EOS M50

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

ƒ/16.0 90.0 mm 1/160 250

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