Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Rush veneer
Bracketed image - 48 shots - of a butterfly on a bare wall.
Red Admiral Butterfly on Leaf
A red admiral butterfly enjoys the last rays of the sun in early fall in the boreal forest.
Butterfly, Atalanta, red admiral, sitting, colorful, close-up, plant, Eupatorium Cannabinum, backgrounds, wildlife, dutch butterfly
Butterfly on Rudbeckia
Vanessa Atalanta butterfly on a green leaf. Black butterfly with red and white spots on wings. Red admiral butterfly
Red Admiral Butterfly
Photograph of a red Admiral butterfly sitting on a garden flower
Battus philenor, the pipevine swallowtail or blue swallowtail, is a swallowtail butterfly found in North America and Central America. This butterfly is black with iridescent-blue hindwings. Sonoran Desert near Tucson, Arizona.
Admiral Butterfly Vanessa atalanta
Closeup of a Gulf Fritillary butterfly feeding on red tubular flowers in a Florida garden
Vanessa atalanta isolated on white background close up
Peacock butterfly on a leaf in Gosforth Park Nature Reserve.
Red Admiral Butterfly (Vanessa atalanta)
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.
vanessa atalanta (butterfly)
Red admiral butterfly in autumn
Countryside outside the city and its vast fields. Easily recognizable and very beautiful butterfly admiral. ( Vanessa atalanta )
Aricia montensis
Red admiral Vanessa atalanta, butterfly black with red oranges fringes sitting a greyed out budleia
Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly (Aglais urticae) on white paper
Kleiner Fuchs Aglais urticae Schmetterling am Schmetterlingsflieder im Hausgarten
A red admiral butterfly about to land on some blooming goldenrod in the late summer.
The brightly coloured butterfly resting on a broad blade of grass in a meadow.
The scarlet tiger moth (Callimorpha dominula, formerly Panaxia dominula) is a colorful moth belonging to the tiger moth subfamily, Arctiinae. The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. \nDescription:\nCallimorpha dominula has a wingspan of 45–55 millimeters. Adults of this species are quite variable in color. The forewings usually have a metallic-green sheen on the blackish areas, with white and yellow or orange markings. Hindwings are red with three large and irregular black markings. These moths may also occur in rare color forms, one with yellow hindwings and body and one with extended black on hindwings. The thorax is black glossed with green and shows two longitudinal short yellow stripes. The abdomen is black. The scarlet tiger moth has developed mouthparts, that allow it to feed on nectar. The caterpillars can reach a length of about 40 millimeters .  They are dark gray with yellow stripes and small white dots.\nBiology:\nThe imagines are active during the day in May and June. This species has a single generation. The caterpillars are polyphagous. They mainly feed on comfrey (Symphytum officinale), but also on a number of other plants (Urtica, Cynoglossum, Fragaria, Fraxinus, Geranium, Lamium, Lonicera, Myosotis, Populus, Prunus, Ranunculus, Rubus, Salix and Ulmus species). \nDistribution and habitat:\nThis species is present in most of Europe and in the Near East (Turkey, South Caucasus and northern Iran). These moths prefer damp areas (wet meadows, river banks, fens and marshes), but they also can be found on rocky cliffs close to the sea (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Red Admiral butterfly. Insect on a white background. Isolated. Free space. View from above.
Butterfly on bush
A beautiful red, brown, black, and white butterfly
Beautiful butterfly is on multi colored flower in nature.
Free Images: "bestof:Vanessa atalanta (Red Admiral), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg en Vanessa atalanta Red Admiral Arnhem the Netherlands nl Vanessa atalanta Atalanta Arnhem Nederland"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day