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Small gray moth, native to coastal California.  Found in areas with coastal live oaks.
Natural detailed closeup on a colorful European minth moth, P ogainst a green background in the garden
Silver-spotted Skipper (Epargyreus clarus)  feeding on Wild Bergamot on a mid-summer afternoon at Clarence Schock Memorial Park in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania.
Beautiful Apollo (Parnassius apollo) resting on a Echium vulgare, known as viper's bugloss.
Painted lady butterfly, vanessa cardui on flower green background
Polites peckius, the Peck's skipper, is a North American butterfly in the family Hesperiidae, subfamily Hesperiinae.
The scarlet tiger moth (Callimorpha dominula, formerly Panaxia dominula) is a colorful moth belonging to the tiger moth subfamily, Arctiinae. , an intresting photo
Coreus marginatus Dock Bug Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Lepidoptera insect on wild plants, North China
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.
Common Commander butterfly feeding on Mikania micrantha Kunth (Mile-a-minute Weed). Butterfly feeding on weeds.
Close shot of an Apollo or mountain Apollo (Parnassius apollo) butterfly resting on a field scabious.
Euphydryas aurinia - Marsh Fritillary - Nazuğum
Potanthus omaha, commonly known as the lesser dart, is a species of skipper butterflies.
Macro of beetle of Oedemera nobilis feeding on a white edelweiss flower
Closeup of Oedemera nobilis
Six-spot burnet sucking the nectar on the meadow flower
Great spangled fritillary seeming to smile as its proboscis goes into a flower of joe-pye weed. Sharply focused on the eyes and head. The butterfly's striking pattern inspires its name. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box. The spangles are the silvery white spots on the underwings.
Longicorn on wild plants, North China
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.
flowers and butterfly in natural life
Butterfly Marsh Fritillary. Euphydryas aurinia.
Butterflies are getting ready to fly
An Hobomok Skipper butterfly pauses on a leaf in the Canadian boreal forest.
Zygaena ephialtes
Moth (probably a Six-spot Burnet) with red and black wings feeding on a Seat hrift flower in Pentire, Newquay, Cornwall on a June day.
Pink Butterflies on green plants, China
Vanessa cardui is a very common migrant that arrives from Africa every summer. Numbers fluctuate annually, depending on the reproduction in Africa.\nThe species is most likely to be seen in open areas were the vegetation has a mosaic structure, such as waste land, fallow ground and pasture land.\nit uses various species of Carduus, Arctium and Cirsium both as larval food plant and as a source of nectar.\n\nThis is a common Migration Butterfly in the Netherlands.
Common brown butterfly extreme macro shot illustrates its captivating details from wings and antennas
Fritillary butterfly (Melitaea athalia)
Free Images: "bestof:Plutella xylostella (Diamondback moth), Giethoorn, the Netherlands.jpg en Plutella xylostella Diamondback moth Giethoorn the Netherlands nl Plutella xylostella"
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