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Atlantic puffin on Machias Seal Island, off the coast of Maine.
Comma butterfly on budding goose-berry.
butterfly on the flower
Painted Lady perched on flower head
Puffin on the coast of England in the golden hour sun
Duck in forest stream
A puffin sits in the green grass
Red Admiral Butterfly
Lepidoptera larvae in the wild, North China
Hoverfly at the fly,Eifel,Germany.
butterfly on the flower
Neoalosterna capitata Beetle on a flower in the Laurentian forest.
Natural detailed closeup on a hairy male Orange tailed mining bee, Andrena haemorrhoa, on the ground
Essex skipper or European skipper butterfly - Thymelicus lineola sucks with its trunk nectar from a Carthusian pink blossom - Dianthus carthusianorum
Field characters: Tot 56-64mm, Ab 43-54mm, Hw 37-42mm. Distinctly smaller than most Aeshna species.\n\nThe commonest small hawker. Numerous in much of our area, and although it can be on the wing during most months in the Mediterranean, further north it is especially associated with late summer and autumn, when it may appear in massive migrations. It is usually identified by its size, relative dull colours and the diagnostic yellow \
Puffin with its beak mouth open, in Iceland
Insect on branch.
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
Ajax On
wasp on a hydrangea flower
A Gentoo Penguin (Pygoscelis papua) stretching it's wings while lying on a rock at Petermann Island.
A closeup of the meadow brown butterfly (Maniola jurtina) on a purple flower
Close up view of Vanessa Atalanta above sprouts.
Leptura quadrifasciata, the spotted longhorn beetle, is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. \nAdult beetles are 11–20 mm long, black with four more or less continuous transverse yellow bands. In extreme cases the elytra may be almost entirely black. It is found throughout the Northern and Central Palaearctic region. \nLarvae make meandering galleries in various trees, including oak, beech, birch, willow, alder, elder and spruce. The life cycle lasts two or three years.\nThe adults are very common flower-visitors, especially Apiaceae species, feeding on pollen and the nectar (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands.
butterfly on the flower in spring
Macro shot of a grasshopper in grass
photo of green fly on plant stem. selective focus
Puffins on the rocks.
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