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Eleusine coracana or finger millet. It is called Ragi and madua in India and Kodo in Nepal. It  is an annual herbaceous plant. Its widely grown as a cereal crop in the in Africa and Asia.
Yellow flowers and bracts of rattlesnake plant, Calathea crotalifera, growing in native habitat. Bajos del Toro, Alajuela, Costa Rica.
Sisymbrium irio been seeds on white background
Stick insect specimens
one stem of Cyperus, sedge plant, isolated on white background
Yellow Star Tulip, Calochortus monophyllus, Pine Grove, California.
Fig wax scale (scientific name: Ceroplastes rusci, Coccidae). Insect reported as a significant pest of citrus and many other crops and ornamental plants.
The speckled bush-cricket (Leptophyes punctatissima) is a flightless species of bush-cricket that occurs across most of Europe.\nDescription:\nThe grass-green body, which is about 15 millimetres long, carries minute black specks, as reflected in the common and Latin name of the species; in addition, the dorsal surface of the abdomen features a brown stripe; this is more pronounced in the male. A yellow-white stripe extends backwards from the eyes. The lower legs and feet are brownish. The antennae are twice as long as the body. The species is brachypterous: the male's forewings are reduced to small flaps, and those of the female are even more reduced. The hindwings are completely absent, and both males and females are flightless.\n The female's ovipositor is laterally compressed and curves sharply upwards. The song of the male, produced by rubbing the right wing against a tooth-like projection at the base of the left, is short (1 to 10 ms) and feeble; at a frequency of 40 kHz, it can best be heard with the aid of a bat detector. Unlike other cricket species, the female is able to respond to the male's calls with a weaker call of her own, which attracts the male to her. The speckled bush-cricket is quite a common species, but its colouring and secretive lifestyle, hidden away in the undergrowth, mean that it often passes unnoticed. \nDistribution:\nThe speckled bush-cricket is common across much of Europe – it ranges from the British Isles, France and Belgium in the west to the European parts of Russia in the east, and from southern Scandinavia in the north to southern Italy, Bulgaria and Greece; it has been recorded as far south as Palestine (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis nice Cricket was photographed in my Garden Pond in September 2020.
Multicoloured Asian lady beetle or Harlequin, Harmonia axyridis (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). Life cycle. Development stages - larva, pupa, adult. Isolated on a white background
White Garlic flowers
Closeup of green grass spikelet isolated on white. Bromopsis inermis.
Insect Specimens: Colorful Beetle
Collection Set of different plants and flowers isolated on a white background
Yellow Star Tulip, Calochortus monophyllus, Pine Grove, California.
Asian swamp eel Monopterus albus isolated on white background
Vivid insect on a flowering stem
Ephedra flowers on white background
Edelweiss flower
Eleusine coracana or finger millet plants. It is called Ragi and madua in India and Kodo in Nepal. It  is an annual herbaceous plant. Its widely grown as a cereal crop in the in Africa and Asia.
Leg of beetle isolated on white
The pupa of Indian meal moth Plodia interpunctella. Developing inside the insect is visible through the translucent shell. The shape and coloration of the moth's wings. Great depth of of field.
ribwort (Plantago lanceolata)
Macro image of the tiny white flowers of Asparagus densiflorus ‘Sprengeri’
Floating and submerged aquatic perennial with slender stems all of one kind. Leaves oval in outline, pinnately divided into narrow, toothed segments, each tooth tipped by a bristle or several bristles; bladders 3mm. Flowers deep yellow, 12-18mm, 4-10 in the raceme, the lower lip of the corolla bent down; spur conical, pointed; fruiting freely. Capsules borne in strongly recurved stalks.\nHabitat: Grows in up to 1m of fresh standing nutrient arm waters.\nFlowering Season: July-August.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except Iceland and Spitsbergen.\n\nThis Picture is made in de “Weerribben” (Overijssel), the Netherlands in 2020.
Macro photography with plantain ( plantago major ) flowers isolated on white background.
Dandelion closeup macro
Closeup of pink limonium small flowers isolated on white
Cicendia quadrangularis Jepson Prairie Reserve, California.
prickly flower sparganium erectum on white background
Yellow flowers garden background
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