Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Beautiful Apollo (Parnassius apollo) resting on a Echium vulgare, known as viper's bugloss.
Common Commander butterfly feeding on Mikania micrantha Kunth (Mile-a-minute Weed). Butterfly feeding on weeds.
Satyrium ledereri  on the plant
macro shot of blue butterfly with soft green yellow background
orange butterfly on a green fir branch close-up, top view
A Common Checkered Skipper sitting on a leaf.
Ochlodes sylvanus Large Skipper Butterfly Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Macro photo of a blue butterfly.
Green ram on fodder plant
Great spangled fritillary on joe-pye weed in summer, top or dorsal view, showing the pattern on the back of the wings. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box. Fritillary is also a checkered flower.
Close up macro photograph of a Small Skipper moth or butterfly. Smallipper
Aglais urticae is a common resident. Migrants are also often seen. Its distribution probably has not changed during the last century. However, the Dutch Monitoring Scheme shows a decline in numbers in the 1990s; the cause is not known.\nAdults can be seen looking for nectar in gardens, parks and on roadside verges. \nThe caterpillars feed on the smaller plants of Urtica dioica in very sunny, open spots.\nThe species flies in two generations from the beginning of March until the end of October. The adult butterfly hibernates in cool, dark places, such as barns, attics, or hollow trees.\n\nThe Picture is made along a small Brook in the Eifel (Germany) in halfway August 2021.
A common blue butterfly in a meadow in close-up. The eye is in focus.
US currency,  copper Indian Head penny from 1862.
Malachite Beetle (Malachius bipustulatus) female eating pollen on Common Hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium) in Baden-Württemberg, Germany
A blue argus butterfly forages a gomphrena in a park.
Great spangled fritillary, fluttering over summer wildflowers (joe-pye weed) as it feeds, with the focus on the eyes and head. The butterfly's striking pattern inspires its name. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box.
Lepidoptera insect on wild plants, North China
Polyommatus icarus is a common resident in the Netherlands.\nHabitat: The species occurs in a variety of flower-rich places, irrespective of nutrient level, pH or humidity. habitats include waste ground, grasslands and roadside verges.\nFood plants: Several species of Fabaceae serve as larval food plant.\nFlight Season: Common Blue flies in two, sometimes three generations from mid-May until the end of August, and hibernates as a half-grown caterpillar.\nDistribution: A common species in a great part of Europe, except the north of Scandinavia.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Close-up of a common buckeye butterfly, with wings spread open, sitting o a white puffball wildflower in a green country field.
Araschnia levana Map Butterfly Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
butterfly on a plant
Fritillary butterfly (Melitaea athalia)
butterfly on the flower in spring
Butterfly on Globe Amaranth flower.
Image of a Thistledown Velvet Ant photographed in Snow Canyon State Park outsdie St. George, Utah.
Blue butterfly on stonecrop, Summer in the Eifel,Germnay.
Beautiful and detailed close up of a colorful small tortoiseshell butterfly, Aglais urticae, from above, with its wings spread against a green background
A Brown Argus Butterfly at rest on foliage
Free Images: "bestof:Plume d'Argus (Millot-1907).png fr Dessin d'une plume d' Argus fr Argusianus argus en Drawing of a Argusianus argus 's feather 1907 Types de plumes - Larousse"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day