View allAll Photos Tagged grasshopper
Llegó a nuestra casa, le hice unas fotos y lo dejamos marchar. Suerte amigo.
The grasshopper came to our house I took some pictures and we let it go. Good luck my friend.
Grasshopper.
More Orthopterans of Malaysia: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2013/02/orthoptera-of-malaysia....
Interesting-looking grasshopper standing on a spider web that was present in the front of the house.
The grasshopper drone is an unpiloted forward attack bug. It leaps across the front lines, fires a couple of plasma bursts at the enemy, and then leaps back. Can be either remotely controlled, or pre-programmed. Unlike a real grasshopper, this drone is incapable of sustained flight - it just jumps really high.
A grasshopper on top of a car bonnet spotted in Beijing, China.
Nikon D40, Sigma 18-200mm.
All of my images are available in hi-res without the stamp and border.
A grasshopper, captured with my Bausch and Lomb 26mm F1.9 lens mounted on a Sony A7R II with a Fotodiox C-mount to Sony E-mount lens adapter and a Fotodiox Sony E-mount Macro Extension Tube.
Grasshopper cart laden with 20 unique species of antennae, each with a descriptive tag. I sold every single one that evening, prompting another wave of insect antennae construction.
Differential Grasshopper (Melanoplus differentialis) male, identified by the herringbone pattern black on hind thighs. Seen in the Riverlands Wildlife Management Area near St. Louis.
This is the 2nd of 2 photos of this species. This grasshopper landed on the windshield of our rented Prius and latched onto the windshield wiper while we were exploring the Riverlands Wildlife Management Area just outside of St. Louis. The 'little' camera, an old Canon SD-450 (with a great macro mode) allowed me to get nearly up to the windshield from the inside to photograph it. This is not the same grasshopper as in the next image (which was taken first).
My thanks to Eric Eaton (co-author of the Kaurman Field guide to Insects of North America with Kenn Kaufman) for the ID. There's soooo much to learn!
Excellent detail when viewed large
See the 'flying grasshopper' shot,
www.flickr.com/photos/rwolfert/2922108359/in/photostream/
a most unusual capture, here.
Green grasshopper, possibly a rare and valuable individual..........especially to another green grasshopper.
The grasshopper drone is an unpiloted forward attack bug. It leaps across the front lines, fires a couple of plasma bursts at the enemy, and then leaps back. Can be either remotely controlled, or pre-programmed. Unlike a real grasshopper, this drone is incapable of sustained flight - it just jumps really high.
This backlit grasshopper is posing on a zinnia bud in our garden. I like the oranges in the grasshopper and in the background flowers.