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Wheel Bug
Sciaroidea insect Fossil inside Burmese Amber of Cenomanian Era, 100 million years ago, from the state of Myanmar
Macro of beetle of Oedemera nobilis feeding on a white edelweiss flower
Lucilia caesar Common Greenbottle Blow Fly Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Horn beetle lying on stomach
Group of beetles in white background XXXL size.
Collection of dried dead insects pinned in a box. White background
A fly on a leaf.
Set of True Bugs of Europe - Hemiptera
Macro portrait of the Fly with on the weathered wooden board
Tipulidae cranefly static photograph from above showing detail intricacy of the body and open wings detail.
A Virginia ctenucha moth on wood in the Laurentian forest.
Close up macro helmeted squash bug on green leaf
Green bottle fly (Lucilia sericata) on flowering plant
Aphid and thrips on a damaged leaf. These are dangerous pests of plants.
Collection of different flying insect specimens
The Royal Goliath beetle is considered to be the heaviest of all beetles inhabiting the planet. The habitat of this beetle is Equatorial Africa. In some males, the body reaches a length of eleven centimeters, weight - up to 100 grams.
Horsefly or gadfly on white background, extreme close-up
Flies on wild plants, North China
Carabus nemoralis Bronze Carabid Ground Beetle Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
green fly
Macro shot of a blue fly on a leaf
species of pest fly from the family Chloropidae. It is also known as the chloropid gout fly or barley gout fly. It is an oligophagous pest of cereal crops.
Mosquito under microscope
Ichneumonid Wasp perched on a green leaf.
A stink bug on a leaf in autumn in the Laurentian forest.
The largest British mosquito at rest, showing black and white bands on legs
Simuliidae, black fly (Diptera) in Baltic amber, Eocene, approximately 56 - 34 million years ago. Image taken with extreme macro and focus stacking technique.
Photo taken by professional camera and lens
Larvae of these beetles are xylophagous. They mainly feed on downy oak (Quercus pubescens), evergreen oak (Quercus ilex) and cork oak (Quercus suber). These longhorn beetle are considered a pest of oaks\n\nThey are considered  a danger for Quercus Forests
Free Images: "bestof:ITWAMOL - Fig 12.png en Figure from Chapter 1 of Insects Their Ways and Means of Living by Robert Evans Snodgrass Insects Their Ways and Means of Living Robert"
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