View allAll Photos Tagged bugs
Yesterday when I was watching TV, my kid came and told she wanted to show me something. Then she switched off all the lights and changed the TV channel to video mode and held this bugs bunny pillow. I was lucky to capture it immediately using the retro camera.
The bull is up unable to stand the constant biting and buzzing of the bugs any longer. He soon rolled in his dusty wallow again to help fend them off. But this only does so for a short time. Danged bugs.....
Top Row, Left to Right: Pale Treehopper (Entylia carinata), Leaf Hopper, nymph (spp.) and Aphid (sp.), Meadow Spittle Bug, nymph (Philaenus spumarius).
Middle Row, Left to Right: Twice Stabbed Stink Bug (Cosmopepla lintneriana), Jagged Ambush Bugs (Phymata sp.), Large Milkweed Beetle, nymphs (Oncopeltus fasciatus).
Bottom Row, Left to Right: Assassin Bug (Sirthenia carinata), Assassin Bug (spp.), Ants (spp.) with Oleander aphids (Aphis nerii).
Of a lovely kind. There are about 130 species of dragonfly to be found here in Ontario, have almost 360 degree vision, and according to mother nature network they've been around for 300 million years!
Something a little different.. This was made with a new Action from PanosFX.. He does very nice Actions and at a reasonable price too...
Happy silver wedding anniversary to Zenas M
We're Here: Silvery
(and a nod to yesterday's theme which I couldn't play; I found Bugs in a skip today; I don't own a teddy bear...)
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Paracorymbia maculicornis
Many thanks to everyone who will pass by visiting my shots. Comments are appreciated. You are welcome. Sergio
Panasonic Lumix FZ28
© Sergio Presbitero 2012, All Rights Reserved
This work may not be copied, reproduced, republished, edited, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold, distributed or uploaded in any way without my prior written permission.
This one was new to me, looked a little like a crane fly, but the head is different. Identified by the Seek IOS app. Those are some long legs...
Yeah, couldn't see but glimpses of the eclipse due to intermittent cloud cover, but we did see this enormous bug. And I got close enough to shoot it. I'm still shocked by that particular detail. ;)
Found this Dock bug (Coreus cf. marginatus; Hemiptera, Coreidae) on spent flowers of Plantago lanceolata (Latvia, Valmiera, close to Gauja river, 9 August 2019).
Fieldstack (fast method, 68 im.); assembled in Zerene Stacker (Pmax & Dmap). Sony A6500, FE 2.8/90mm Macro G OSS; ISO-400, f/4, 1/400s, -0.7step, diffused natural light.
Explanations on gear & methods used, see: : www.flickr.com/photos/andredekesel/8086137225/in/dateposted
A Dock Bug (Coreus marginatus) on a cluster of blackberries!
Of the 10 British species of Squashbug the Dock Bug (Coreus marginatus) is the commonest and largest species likely to be found in the southern half of the UK. This is an excellent time of year to find them as they feed in the sunshine on ripening blackberrries and other fruits and seeds in preperation for hibernation.
Does anyone out there know the name of this bug?
Thank you joeyjoe1 for the name "Colorado Potato Beetle"
Squadron ready for take off Sir !
Blue bottle flies on dandelion leaf in a light beam. Natural light. Taken at Highdown gardens Worthing
This Shield Bug was on my Garlic. It would pause occasionally and let me take a few photos.
Tech Specs: Canon 80D (F11, 1/250, ISO 100) + a Canon MP-E 65mm macro lens (2x) + a diffused MT-26EX-RT (E-TTL metering, -1/3 FEC). This is a single, uncropped, frame taken hand held. I used an artificial flower to keep the background from being black.