View allAll Photos Tagged mosquitos...
De Havilland Mosquito B.35 TA634 at the de Havilland Aircraft Heritage Centre (Mosquito Aircraft Museum), London Colney, in 1978.
Sunday fun at The de Havilland Aircraft Heritage Centre, formerly the Mosquito Aircraft Museum, in Hertfordshire, England.
Motor Mosquito para instalar en las Bicicletas, notese que es con Q no con K como los modernos, es de la Fabrica Garelli
G-AOCK DH98 Sea Mosquito PR XVI (some joker painted it as AOOK prior to its demise on a bonfire).
Seven Sea Mosquitos were acquired by Robert Short in 1956 and registered G-AOCI to G-AOCN. OCI, K and L ended up at Andover. Three PR VXIs went to Israel in 1956, possibly via Blackbushe.
Ex-regs were in order NS639, NS742, NS753, RG173, RG174, TA614, TW246.
Own photo.
It may have been cloudy but it was still 35°C, making the steep hill down to the bay hard work in both directions.
One of the small pools had a large number of mosquito pupae. I guess there weren't any dragonfly larvae in that one since dragonfly larvae would clear out the mosquito larvae.
Mosquito repellent, off brand 5/2016, pic by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube
Apparently this mosquito belongs to the anopheles genus. View full screen to see its ultra-fine hairs
Culex (Culex) pipiens f. molestus (Forskal, 1775)
Family Culicidae 蚊科
Genus Culex (Culex) 家蚊屬(家蚊亞屬)
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Pantlegs covered in mosquitos while birding the Woodland Trail at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, Accomack county, Virginia. Yeah, I'm wearing clogs - so what?!
Mosquito (Aedes canadensis) - The Orange Trail parking area, The Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge Wilderness Area, Gillette, New Jersey
I went out looking to capture birds from my car on this rainy/misty day, but didn't have much luck. After the rain stopped I decided to try some macro, but with no sun all the dragonflies and butterflies stayed under cover. There were plenty of these guys around though, so I decided to capture a few of the ones that weren'y buzzing around my head.
Unfotunately it was pretty dark out so I wound up making these captures at F8, ISO 3200 at big parts of a second. These are a bit noisy, but filling the frame with your subject can make up for a lot of sins except for DOF.
The rig consisted of a 100 mm macro lens with + 1.4xTC + 60 mm X-tubes on a 5D body
My thanks to Scott C. Crans at Rutgers for his help with this ID