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Diatoms, algae under microscopic view, phytoplankton, fossils, silica, golden yellow algae
Close up of cristal beads
centropyxis aculeata (amoeboid organism) under the microscope - optical microscope x400 magnification
Photomicrograph of algae, Cosmarium turpinii, a desmid. Live specimen. Wet mount, 40X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination.
3D cartoon and Gaussian surface models, PDB 6kxs, white background
Tilia Stem C.S.under light microscopy
The algae species Pediastrum boryanum under the microscope.
Cheyletiella blakei Mite - Small Cat pest view under a microscope
Microalgae under microscopic view, green algae, cyanobacteria, phytoplankton, diatom, algae mix collage background
The scarlet tiger moth (Callimorpha dominula, formerly Panaxia dominula) is a colorful moth belonging to the tiger moth subfamily, Arctiinae. The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. \nDescription:\nCallimorpha dominula has a wingspan of 45–55 millimeters. Adults of this species are quite variable in color. The forewings usually have a metallic-green sheen on the blackish areas, with white and yellow or orange markings. Hindwings are red with three large and irregular black markings. These moths may also occur in rare color forms, one with yellow hindwings and body and one with extended black on hindwings. The thorax is black glossed with green and shows two longitudinal short yellow stripes. The abdomen is black. The scarlet tiger moth has developed mouthparts, that allow it to feed on nectar. The caterpillars can reach a length of about 40 millimeters .  They are dark gray with yellow stripes and small white dots.\nBiology:\nThe imagines are active during the day in May and June. This species has a single generation. The caterpillars are polyphagous. They mainly feed on comfrey (Symphytum officinale), but also on a number of other plants (Urtica, Cynoglossum, Fragaria, Fraxinus, Geranium, Lamium, Lonicera, Myosotis, Populus, Prunus, Ranunculus, Rubus, Salix and Ulmus species). \nDistribution and habitat:\nThis species is present in most of Europe and in the Near East (Turkey, South Caucasus and northern Iran). These moths prefer damp areas (wet meadows, river banks, fens and marshes), but they also can be found on rocky cliffs close to the sea (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Planaria worm in pond water
Natural agate surfaces, suitable for backgrounds and wallpapers.
Cross-section Dicot, Monocot and Root of Plant Stem under the microscope for classroom education.
plant Zea Stem C.S. under light mircoscope with white background
Leiden leaf c.s. under microscope
Rare Scorpion (Arachnida) inclusion in Burmese amber, Myanmar, Cenomian, Upper Cretaceous, approximately 100 million years ago, age of dinosaurs. Image taken with extreme macro and focus stacking technique.
Freshwater Closterium algae (unicellular charophyte green algae) - optical microscope x200 magnification
Photomicrograph of two rotifers. Rapidly rotating cilia at top of heads, internal organs visible. Live specimen. Wet mount, 10X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination.
Dinophysis algae under microscopic view, Chromista, diatoms, phytoplankton, fossils, silica, golden yellow algae
Giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera) off the coast of Southern California, USA.
Photomicrograph: Fungal colony, skin scraping for fungus test
Bone marrow plasma cells .Plasma cell neoplasms are diseases in which the body makes too many plasma cells. Plasma cell neoplasms can be benign or malignant. Diagnosed with Immunostain CD138 positive.
Epidermis. Electron microscope micrograph showing a keratinocyte of spinous layer. The epithelial cell has a polygonal shape, central nucleus with nucleolus, cytoplasm full of keratin filament bundles, and numerous dark desmosomes crossing the intercellular spaces.
plant rape flower cross section under light mircoscope with white background
Lime trunk
Curly marble stone with fashion veins.
Lily leaf c.s. under microscope
Red skunk cleaner shrimp - Lysmata Amboinensis
microscopic view of plant cells for botanic education and analysis
Rat tailed maggot photographed in a studio
Free Images: "bestof:Ciliophora morphology.svg This is what a Ciliophora would look like It is single-celled and has a nucleus Struttura di un ciliato 1 Vacuolo contrattile 2"
Ciliophora morphology.svg
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