View allAll Photos Tagged grasshopper
Grasshopper, silk paper with methyl cellulose, 21x21 cm
Saltamontes, papel seda con metilcelulosa, 21x21cm
By PICARUELO 1991
Grasshopper taken with a reversed lens for extreme macro, also required a diffused flash. That yellow underbelly is the refracted light off the flower petals below. Sept. 2006.
Grasshoppers are species which change colour and behaviour at high population densities are called Grasshoppers the typical insect body of head, thorax and abdomen. The head is held vertically, at an angle to the body with the mouth at the bottom. It bears a large pair of compound eyes which give all-round vision, three simple eyes which can detect light and dark and a pair of antennae which are sensitive to touch and smell. The downward-directed mouthparts are modified for chewing and there are two sensory palps in front of the jaws.
No PP, Just KISS (Keep it simple stupid) No HDR, No Retouching without Edition No Photoshop @ All...
Grasshopper in action!
D300 + Nikkor AF105/2.8D macro.
DIY housing with VS14S external fast shutter 3.5ms, F-mount 37mm thick.
Flashes external 2 x SB-80-DX.
F16 ISO 200 manual mode.
Original frame size 60mm.
Free distance object to front lens: 300mm.
Optical detector system with line array 128 pixels.
FPGA hardware controller Terassic DE0-nano board.
Location: Oostrozebeke.
Date: 2013 Sep 28
Shot with old Nikon 105mm macro mounted on Sony NEX-7 in manual mode. A northern green-striped hopper: www.whatsthatbug.com/2009/03/26/northern-green-striped-gr...
A grasshopper nymph from Tjøme, Norway. It's size was about 10 mm in length. You can tell it's a nymph from the tiny, underdeveloped wings. I'm not sure about the exact species.
Image taken with a Raynox DCR-150 macro converter.
Grasshopper on wheat spike.
For more information, see CIMMYT's Wheat Doctor: wheatdoctor.cimmyt.org/index.php?option=com_content&t....
Photo credit: CIMMYT.