View allAll Photos Tagged copulation

¡¡Mira a ver cómo te colocas que nos vamos a caer!! parece decirle la hembra al macho por la inusual forma de agarrarse con las patas.

Cópula de Pyrrhosoma nimphula en el Molí de L'Ombría. Rio Vinalopó. (Alicante) España

Imagen recortada un 8%

 

Look to see how you position yourself that we will fall! the female seems to say to the male because of the unusual way of holding on with the legs.

Copulation of Pyrrhosoma nimphula in the Molí de L'Ombría. Rio Vinalopó. (Alicante) Spain

Image cut by 8%

  

Wild Jaguars - fighting after the copulation. At Pantanal - MT - Brasil. Better seen Large.

 

Wishing a Peaceful Thursday.

 

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!

 

© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated by any means without my written explicit permission, including the use on websites and similar medias. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.

 

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Member of Nature’s Spirit

Good Stewards of Nature

Pair of harlequin ladybeetles (Harmonia axyridis) copulating on dock (full of aphids). The male is probably novemdecimsignata (or possibly succinea) color form, the female is conspicua color form.

 

Para biedronek azjatyckich (Harmonia axyridis) kopulujących na szczawiu (pełnym mszyc). Samiec jest prawdopodobnie odmiany barwnej novemdecimsignata (a może succinea), samica jest formy barwnej conspicua.

A pair of Green Darners (Anax junius) after copulation, still in tandem while the female oviposits in the water.

A pair of holly blue butterflies caught copulating on a holly bush in my back garden. The female is the smaller butterfly on the left hand side and the male the larger one on the right.

Copulating pair of firebugs (Pyrrhocoris apterus) on a moss covering a tree.

 

Kopulująca para kowali bezskrzydłych (Pyrrhocoris apterus) na porastającym drzewo mchu.

427) Malayan Peacock Pheasant

Malayan peacock-pheasant, Polyplectron malacense, Merak Pongsu

This is one of the shortest-tailed peacock-pheasants. Adult males are about 50 cm long, about half of which is made up by the tail. The female is slightly smaller than the male, with a noticeably shorter tail. A shy and elusive bird, the Malay peacock-pheasant is endemic to lowland forests of the Peninsular Malaysia from the Isthmus of Kra region southwards. Due to ongoing habitat loss, small population size and limited range, the Malayan peacock-pheasant is evaluated as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, meaning that its numbers have declined about two-thirds in the last decade or so, and that this trend is expected to last for another decade at least. It is listed on CITES Appendix II. The mating season is not well resolved; recently used nests have been found in March, April and August. Breeding activity may in fact occur essentially all year round (as in many lowland rainforest birds), triggered by abundance of mast rather than by a fixed circannual rhythm. Males scrape the debris and leaf litter off their display sites in forest clearings, from where they maintain vocal contact with their mate and progeny. They adopt various highly stereotyped and ritualised postures and associated plumage displays, which reveal prominent ocelli on remiges and rectrices. These behaviors are likewise used in self-defense. When utilised in pair-bonding behavior copulation may occur subsequent to lateral displays. Anterior displays are also performed which may include curious clicking and vibrating pulsations of feather quills created via stridulation.

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Réalisé le 19 février 2014 à Puerto Angel, Mexique.

 

Cliquez sur l'image pour l'agrandir / click on the photograph to enlarge it.

 

Un couple en train de copuler à la surface de la mer. Le mâle est fermement attaché à la carapace de la femelle qui lutte pour rester à flot. / A pair copulationg at the sea surface. The male is firmly attached to the carapace of the female who struggles to stay afloat.

 

Taken on February, 19th / 2014 in Puerto Angel, Mexico.

A pair of small blue butterflies mating in the masts field at Prestbury Hill nature reserve near Cheltenham. This was taken on Monday when I met fellow flickr member Alex Barclay "Squeeky51". There were a large number of small blues on the wing particularly in the bottom corner of the masts field close to one of the entrances to the reserve and the Cotswold Way public footpath. This pair was one of two copulating couples seen in this part of the reserve. I also found about a dozen small blues feeding on bird droppings along the Cotswold Way footpath. Other species seen on the day included green hairstreaks, dingy skippers, duke of burgundy, green veined white, small white, speckled wood, small heath, brimstone, orangetip, a small copper, a brown argus and a male common blue. Moths seen included lattice, six spot burnets and cistus forester.

Yesterday a wild daffodil, today a wild orchid for letter O! Ophrys tenthredinifera is the sawfly orchid, named after the insect it resembles. Like many wild orchids, it's reproduction strategy relies on mimicking the female of a specific species of insect (in appearance, touch and released pheromones) to attract males that will pollinate it while trying to copulate with it. I'm always amazed at the things nature comes up with.

 

Flower 5/100 for the project "100 flowers 2025"

Pair of firebugs (Pyrrhocoris apterus) during multi-hour copulation.

 

Para kowali bezskrzydłych (Pyrrhocoris apterus) w trakcie wielogodzinnej kopulacji.

Meadow Brown : Maniola jurtina

 

Cuando el macho agarra a la hembra para copular pasa unos instantes en tándem, después procederá a la recarga de esperma y finalmente tratará de que ella haga el movimiento presciso para que se produzca el acoplamiento. Ese instante puede producir figuras atractivas como las que podemos observar.

Fotograma recortado un 8%, adaptado a formato 4x3.

En El Coto. Villena (Alicante)

 

When the male grabs the female to copulate, he spends a few moments in tandem, then he will proceed to recharge the sperm and finally he will try to make her make the precise movement for the coupling to take place. That moment can produce attractive figures like the ones we can see.

Frame cropped by 8%, adapted to 4x3 format.

In El Coto. Villena (Alicante)

This mating pair of eared grebes was quite interesting to watch over the course of an hour or two. They had laid claim to this bed of matted reeds and chased off any other pairs that came to investigate. There was another reed platform nearby, and that was also part of their claimed territory.

 

Now, if you like grebe porn, this pair would give you a sensational show. They would pair up every 10 minutes or so, do their thing, then separate to do some displaying and preening. See a link in the comments section for a photo and description of that behaviour.

 

When about to mate, the female lies flat and the male approaches from behind and waddles up onto the female's back. After getting everything lined up, the actual copulation is quite quick. The male then waddles forward at an angle to dismount. Sometimes things don't quite work and and the male ends up straddling the neck & head of his lady friend, forcing it under the water. Not so elegant. This image shows the male about to step on her head to complete his ungainly dismount.

Purace, Cauca, Colombia.

The male Andean Condor arrived first then was joined by the female. We were fortunate to observe this courtship dance, and that ultimately led to copulation.

Scathophaga stercoraria ♂ (Diptera, Scathophagidae)

Orange Dung Fly

Orange Dungfliege

Orange Møgflue

 

Orange Dung Flies don't produce bullshit, but they live on it.

Others do both.

 

Exposure time (= flash duration): 50 µs = 1/20.000 s

 

Except for ISO, the EXIF data are incorrect, because the equipment used is not Canon-compatible:

www.flickr.com/photos/99927961@N06/19667784774/in/photoli...

 

Die EXIF-Daten sind falsch, bis auf den ISO-Wert, weil das Zubehör nicht Canon-kompatibel ist:

www.flickr.com/photos/99927961@N06/19667784774/in/photoli...

  

The Common Yellowthroat was first collected in what is now Maryland, and described by Carl Linnaeus in 1766, making it one of the first species of birds to be described from the New World.

Common Yellowthroats are monogamous within a breeding season and only infrequently will males have two mates in their territory. Females, however, are not faithful to their mates and often attract other males with their calls for extra-pair copulations.

 

Taken from www.tn.gov/twra/wildlife/birds/common-yellowthroat.html

The green-veined White (Pieris napi) is a widespread and common butterfly of the Pieridae family occurring throughout Europe, temperate Asia, and at high altitudes in the Atlas mountains of north Africa. It also occurs in North America where it is known as the Mustard White. Other less frequently used names for this butterfly are Green-veined White, Margin White, Microstriata White and Sharp-veined White.

At first glance this looks like a small white butterfly. On closer inspection, when it is resting, you can see the gray-green lines on the underside of the wings which give this butterfly its name. In both sexes, the upper surfaces of the wings are yellowish white and the forewings have blackish tips. Males have a central dark spot on the forewings, whereas females have two. The wingspan is approximately 45 mm.

The Green-veined White is found in damp, grassy places with some shade, forest edges, hedgerows, meadows and wooded river valleys. It is found from sea level to high elevations (3500 m).

This picture was taken in "De Passiflorahoeve" (Passiflorafarm) in Harskamp, the Netherlands.

 

Het klein geaderd witje (Pieris napi) is een dagvlinder uit de familie Pieridae, de witjes.

De vleugelspanwijdte is 4 tot 5,3 cm (gemiddeld 4,5 cm).

De grondkleur van de vleugels is wit. Op de onderzijde is de ondervleugel en de vleugelpunt van de voorvleugel soms geel. De aders zijn aan de onderkant van de vleugels groengrijs bestoven. Dit is echter in de zomer aanzienlijk minder duidelijk dan in het voorjaar. De soort is dan niet makkelijk te onderscheiden van het klein koolwitje, die ook net zo groot is. Aan de bovenzijde van de voorvleugel heeft het mannetje een zwartige stip, het vrouwtje twee. De vlek aan de vleugelpunt (apex) is gelobd, en loopt naar beneden toe druppelsgewijs af.

Het klein geaderd witje komt grofweg op heel het noordelijk halfrond voor; Europa, Azië, Noord-Amerika en noordelijk Afrika.

De vlinder vliegt van zeeniveau tot 3500 meter in berggebieden. Dit witje komt voor in veel habitattypen en landschappen. Het kan worden aangetroffen in open en meer gesloten landschappen op allerlei typen van graslanden en heiden. Het mag echter niet te droog zijn. In Nederland en België is de soort zeer algemeen.

Deze foto is gemaakt in de vlindervolière voor Europese vlindersoorten (kwekerij Europese vlinders) van zorgboerderij De Passiflorahoeve bij Harskamp op de Veluwe tussen Ede en Apeldoorn. Info: www.passiflorahoeve.nl/

______________________________

 

All rights reserved. Copyright © Martien Uiterweerd (Foto Martien).

All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission.

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Esta pareja de I.elegans (cópula) ha comenzado con sus tareas reproductivas nada mas notar los primeros calores del mes de abril.

Captura realizada en una charca próxima a la ciudad de Alicante.

 

This couple of I.elegans (copulation) has started with their reproductive tasks as soon as they notice the first heat of the month of April.

Capture made in a pond near the city of Alicante.

Little dragon copulation was thriving at Lakenheath Fen in July. The sun was very strong during the buzz of activity, but I was quite pleased with the way it brought out this pair's iridescence

Ophrys ficalhoana is an orchid native to some regions of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa. The genus Ophrys is referred to as "bee orchids" due to the flowers of some species resemblance to the furry bodies of bees and other insects. Orchids of the genus Ophrys use sexual deception to attract pollinators to their flowers. In sexual deception, an orchid attracts male pollinators by producing the sex pheromone of virgin female pollinators in addition to providing visual and tactile cues which stimulate mating behavior in the male pollinators. They then attempt copulation, called “pseudocopulation”, with the orchid labellum. I was delighted to find some species of this fascinating genus while hiking in the mountains of Andalusia. This video gives some insight into sexual deception in bee orchids: www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmI-rJuYAjw

Immediately after copulation, the American Avocets stood side to side and cross bills. The male also has his wing draped over the back of the female.

 

North of Edmonton. Late afternoon. Heavily cropped.

 

Photo is copyrighted. All rights reserved. Please do not use the photo without permission. Thank you for viewing and comments.

 

This balancing act is the prelude to eventual copulation... Often the less experienced terns need to practice a bit before things fall into place. Sometimes this balancing act can last for a few minutes when finally the female "buckles" and the male hops off. This is an absolute full frame image taken from a blind, This week, there will be hundreds of eggs... Chicks to follow in 23-25 days!

Japanese Beetles mate in a vineyard in Jo Daviess County, Illinois. Possibly they'd earlier participated in the vineyard's winery tour :)

 

Nikon D7500, Sigma 18-300, ISO 100, f/8.0, 145mm, 1/160s

El macho agarrará a la hembra y se mantendrá en tándem hasta que ella acceda a unir las genitalias (queriendo o sin querer) y procederán a la cópula. Por lo observado, ésta puede tener una duración de más de diez minutos y acto seguido, en tándem, se dirigirán a las zonas de puesta.

Fotograma recortado un 3%

En el Coto. Villena (Alicante) España

 

The male will grab the female and remain in tandem until she agrees to unite the genitalia (willingly or unwillingly) and they will proceed with copulation. From what has been observed, this can last for more than ten minutes and then, in tandem, they will go to the laying areas.

Frame cut by 3%

In el Coto. Villena (Alicante) Spain

  

Lestes sponsa, is a damselfly, with a wide Palaearctic distribution. It is known commonly as the emerald damselfly or common spreadwing. Both males and females have a metallic green colour and when resting its wings are usually half opened.

One of the larger damselflies, this species is most common in July and August. It is often found by ponds and lakes, and is very rarely seen along flowing water. Emerald Damselflies like to perch among reeds, their colour providing good camouflage. They are not as strong fliers when compared to other common damselflies such as the common blue or large red damselflies, but they are more likely to be seen on misty, rainy days then those species. When disturbed they usually do not fly very far away, landing on another perch a few yards away. Their habit of perching with their wings half open is characteristic of the family Lestidae and gives rise to their other common name of spreadwings. A population can consist of several hundred insects.

L. sponsa mate in the usual dragonfly manner and will form tandem pairs away from water. Copulation lasts from 30–60 minutes and after mating they stay paired for egg-laying. The female usually lays eggs in submerged vegetation and whilst egg-laying the female can remain submerged for 30 min. The female pierces the tissue of aquatic plants and inserts her eggs. Occasionally females lay their eggs in vegetation above the water surface in places that will become submerged when the water level rises. The eggs start to develop and will continue to develop for the next few weeks. Then due to changing environmental conditions the development of the eggs slows down. In this state of slow development, called diapause the eggs overwinter. L. sponsa is an obligatory univoltine species.

The prolarva stage hatches from the egg in spring. This is a specialised short lived stage often lasting only minutes. The prolarva has no limbs and cannot feed but it can move by jumping or wriggling and if a prolarva is not in water when it hatches it will move about until water is found. Once in water the prolarva molt to the second stadia stage. The larvae are active and actively hunt prey leading to rapid larval growth. The larvae molt from one stadia to the next until growth is complete; in dragonflies the larval stages are the only stages where growth occurs. The number of stadia is not fixed and in good conditions the last larval stage, called F-0 can be reached in as little as 8 weeks.

The adults emerge in July and are on the wing until September. Adults are not sexually mature when they emerge and need a week or more, depending on conditions, before they can breed. In L.sponsa in Japan the length of the summer maturation period is correlated with temperature and lasts on average 20 days in the north where it is cooler up to 120 days in the hotter south. This stops egg laying early in summer, which could lead to egg not entering diapause and hatching in autumn. This would disrupt the normal cycle as larva hatched in autumn would not survive the winter.

  

mallard /Stockenten couple at the copulation 15022022

Large blue's in copulation.

Photography is a kind of overstatement, a heroic copulation with the material world

Susan SontagOn Photography

 

Discusión / discussion [Esp. /Eng]

 

Las luces altas están sobreexpuestas pero manteniendo un mínimo de textura (se puede apreciar la señalización horizontal del asfalto de Pº Echagaray, un pié de árbol...), y las bajas están retocadas para eliminar cualquier detalle y convertir los diferentes planos en un puro elemento geométrico, retocando puntualmente la curva de luminancia para conseguir destacar el pequeño graffiti. El cut-out (desaturado selectivo) es obvio, y como Todd Ye comenta, busca destacar la combinación rojo-negro deliberadamente, haciendo un guiño a los colores anarquistas. La basculación del encuadre se apoya en un punto áureo (vértice del triángulo gris inferior izquierdo, que "apunta" al graffiti, para que gane relevancia). He buscado provocar una sensación de frialdad geométrica e inhumana, descuido urbano, la ciudad como escenario inhóspito en el que las cuentas mal pagadas del sistema se reflejan en graffitis que intentan marcar territorio "humano".

 

The highlights are overexposed while retaining a minimum structure and detail (see the arrows on the traffic lanes, the base of a tree...). The lowlights are worked to remove any detail and turn every plane into a single geometric element, touching the luminance curve to enhance the small graffiti. The cut-out is obvious, and as T.ye points out, it deliberately looks for enhancing the red-black combo, winking at the anarchist colors. The pitch of the frame relies on an aureal point (the vertex of the grey triangle at the bottom left corner, which points out to the graffiti to highlight its presence). I've tried to convey a feeling of a cold and inhuman geometry, urban negligence, the city as a bleak stage where the graffitis mirrors the system's debts, pretending to stak a claim over a human territory.

Antes y después de la cópula se producen situaciones como ésta.

Imagen recortada un 8%.

Tomada en el Coto. Villena (Alicante) España.

 

Before and after copulation situations like this occur.

Image cut by 8%.

Taken in El Coto. Villena (Alicante) Spain.

Detalle de la cópula de Enallagma cyathigerum captado con la ayuda de la lente de Raynox 150.

Tumbado y prácticamente encima de ellos, sin inmutarse.

Fotograma completo, sin recortes.

Tomada en el Coto. Villena (Alicante) España

 

Detail of the Enallagma cyathigerum copulation captured with the help of the Raynox 150 lens.

Lying and practically on top of them, without flinching.

Full frame, without cuts.

Taken in El Coto. Villena (Alicante) Spain

Al visualizar este támden de Lestes, esperaba que copulasen, pero llegué a perderlos de vista sin ver la cópula...luego me di cuenta de que eran dos machos, además de diferentes especies, dryas y virens.

 

When I visualized this Lestes tamden, I expected them to copulate, but I managed to lose sight of them without seeing the copulation...then I realized that they were two males, as well as different species, dryas and virens.

Bad hair day!

249) Asian OpenBilled Stork

Asian Openbill, Asian Openbill Stork, Anastomus oscitans,

This distinctive stork is found mainly in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. It is greyish or white with glossy black wings and tail and the adults have a gap between the arched upper mandible and recurved lower mandible. Although resident within their range, they make long distance movements in response to weather and food availability. The Asian openbill like many other storks forages at wetlands, reaching them by flying with wing flapping interspersed with gliding. During the warmer part of the day, they also soar on thermals and have a habit of descending rapidly into their feeding areas. Groups may forage together in close proximity in shallow water or marshy ground on which they may walk with a slow and steady gait. The Asian openbill feeds mainly on large molluscs, especially Pila species, and they separate the shell from the body of the snail using the tip of the beak. The tip of the lower mandible of the beak is often twisted to the right. This tip is inserted into the opening of the snail and the body is extracted with the bill still under water. Like other storks, they are silent except for clattering produced by the striking of the male's bill against that of the female during copulation.

427) Malayan Peacock Pheasant

Malayan peacock-pheasant, Polyplectron malacense, Merak Pongsu

This is one of the shortest-tailed peacock-pheasants. Adult males are about 50 cm long, about half of which is made up by the tail. The female is slightly smaller than the male, with a noticeably shorter tail. A shy and elusive bird, the Malay peacock-pheasant is endemic to lowland forests of the Peninsular Malaysia from the Isthmus of Kra region southwards. Due to ongoing habitat loss, small population size and limited range, the Malayan peacock-pheasant is evaluated as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, meaning that its numbers have declined about two-thirds in the last decade or so, and that this trend is expected to last for another decade at least. It is listed on CITES Appendix II. The mating season is not well resolved; recently used nests have been found in March, April and August. Breeding activity may in fact occur essentially all year round (as in many lowland rainforest birds), triggered by abundance of mast rather than by a fixed circannual rhythm. Males scrape the debris and leaf litter off their display sites in forest clearings, from where they maintain vocal contact with their mate and progeny. They adopt various highly stereotyped and ritualised postures and associated plumage displays, which reveal prominent ocelli on remiges and rectrices. These behaviors are likewise used in self-defense. When utilised in pair-bonding behavior copulation may occur subsequent to lateral displays. Anterior displays are also performed which may include curious clicking and vibrating pulsations of feather quills created via stridulation.

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Mélitée noirâtre : False Heath Fritillary : Melitaea diamina

photograhed in the Hautes Pyrenees... elevation 1400m.

The common blue (Polyommatus icarus) is a small butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. (Left female, right male)

The butterfly can be found in Europe, North Africa, the Canary Islands, and temperate Asia to Northern China.

The common blue is the most widespread of the blue butterflies.

It is found in a variety of habitats including heathland, woodland rides, grassy meadows, parks and even large gardens.

The common blue has a wingspan of 25 - 36 millimetres.

Males are slightly larger than females.

There a great difference between the male and female in this species. The upper side of the wings of the males is an iridescent lilac blue with a thin black-brown border and a white fringe.

The upper side of the females' wings are brown with a row of orange-red spots along the edges of the wings and usually some blue at the base. The extent of blue and brown is extremely variable depending on location.

The underside has a grayish base color in the males and a more brownish hue in the females. Both sexes have a row of red spots along the edge of the hindwing and extending onto the forewing, though they are generally fainter there, particularly in the males, where they are sometimes missing altogether.

 

Het icarusblauwtje (Polyommatus icarus) is een kleine vlinder uit de familie Lycaenidae. (Links vrouwtje, rechts mannetje).

De vlinder is te vinden in heel Europa, Noord-Afrika, de Canarische eilanden, en gematigd Azië tot in Japan. In Nederland en België is de soort zeer algemeen en het meest voorkomende blauwtje.

Het icarusblauwtje heeft een spanwijdte van 25 à 36 mm.

De mannetjes zijn vaak iets groter dan de vrouwtjes.

De geslachten verschillen in uiterlijk ook sterk van elkaar.

De vleugels van de mannetjes zijn aan de bovenzijde egaal blauw.

De vrouwtjes zijn van boven bruingekleurd met een rij oranjerode vlekjes. De vrouwtjes hebben aan de bovenzijde vaak ook wat blauw aan de basis. De hoeveelheid van het bruin en blauw is variabel en afhankelijk van de locatie.

Door de bruine bovenkant worden de vrouwtjes soms aangezien voor een bruin blauwtje (Aricia agestis).

De onderkant heeft een grijsachtige basiskleur bij de mannetjes en een meer bruinachtige tint bij de vrouwtjes.

Beide geslachten hebben een rij rode vlekken langs de rand van de achtervleugel. Op de voorvleugel zijn deze vlekken zwakker, vooral bij de mannetjes, waar ze soms helemaal ontbreken.

Het icarusblauwtje vliegt van begin mei tot begin oktober in twee, soms drie overlappende generaties.

Het vlindertje komt voor in allerlei kruidenrijke vegetaties, als graslanden, braakliggende terreinen, parken, wegbermen en dijken.

Deze opname is gemaakt in de Europese volière van zorgboerderij www.passiflorahoeve.nl bij Harskamp op de Veluwe.

Europese en uitheemse vlinders worden daar gekweekt.

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All rights reserved. Copyright © Martien Uiterweerd (Foto Martien). All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission.

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Pair of sacred kingfishers. Must have been in the early stage of courtship, and they did not visit a nest hollow in the hour or more I stayed there. There was one unsuccessful attempt at copulation.

Callum Brae, ACT, November, 2013.

A pair of common blue butterflies mating in the Bill Smyllie field at Prestbury Hill nature reserve near Cheltenham. The female is the browner fresher looking specimen and the male the greyer faded specimen on the end of the blade of grass.

Los apareamientos de esta especie se suelen ver con frecuencia durante el otoño en este paraje.

Sabremos que es striolatum principalmente por los colores de los ojos y del tórax, en cuanto al macho. Las tomas de cópula y claramente en este caso nos muestran las diferencias cromáticas entre macho y hembra.

Fotograma completo y adaptado a formato panorámico.

En la Fuente del Chopo. Villena (Alicante) España

 

Mating of this species is often seen during the fall in this area.

We will know that it is striolatum mainly by the colors of the eyes and thorax, as for the male. The copulation shots clearly show us in this case the chromatic differences between male and female.

Full frame and adapted to panoramic format.

At the Chopo Fountain. Villena (Alicante) Spain

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