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Green rose chafer between white dog rose blossoms
Pentatoma rufipes Red-Legged Shieldbug Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Blue Milkweed Beetle Parheminodes pulcher standing on a stem.
Coccinella septempunctata, the seven-spot ladybird (or, in North America, seven-spotted ladybug or \
Insect on branch.
Ladybug and Thistle in Springtime
De roodkopvuurkever (Pyrochroa serraticornis) is een kever uit de familie Vuurkevers (Pyrochroidae).\nHerkenning: Grote (10-14 mm) vuurkever (Pyrochroidae). Helderrood met zwarte sprieten en poten. Onderscheidt zich van P. coccinea door de rode kop; van Cucujus cinnaberinus door het ontbreken van brede wangen en het bezit van een ongekarteld regelmatig afgerond halsschild.\nBiotoop: Vochtige loofbossen.\nVliegtijd: April-juni.\nVoorkomen: Vrij algemeen in het westen van Nederland; in het oosten minder algemeen.\n\nIk vond deze fraaie kever in de “Stille Kern” (Flevoland) in mei 2020.
Lepidoptera larvae in the wild, North China
Nabis rugosus Common Damsel Bug Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
A Green Rose Chafer on a pink Spiraea japonica flower in nature
Western conifer seed bug (Leptoglossus occidentalis) on wall in Connecticut, mid October. A leaf-footed bug, it often enters houses to escape the first cold snaps of autumn. Harmless aside from being a minor pest.
Macro of small beatle on a maragold blossom
Beetle bug on flower petal - animal behavior.
a red lily beetle sits on a leaf
Green grass background with  insect, selective focus, canon 1Ds mark III
The tansy beetle (Chrysolina graminis) macro photography. Bug is sitting on the leaf.
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.
seven-spot ladybug sitting on a white flowering plant in the garden in summer
Dolycoris baccarum Sloe Bug Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
False blister beetle, also known as Pollen-feeding beetle (probably Anogcodes melanurus) sitting on a leaf of reed grass
Grasshopper plays hide and seek on red leaf.
Epilachna vigintioctopunctata on plant in the wild
We landed at Elisabeth bay with our Zodiac boats to explore and watch the Giant tortoises in their natural environment.
Macro shot of a metallic rose chafer or the green rose chafer (Cetonia aurata) crawling on a white blossom of a rose plant flowering in on orchard in sunlight
Close up of an orange and black Ccomb Clawed Beetle scientific name Alleculinae on a Queen Anne's Lace flower in northern Israel.
Neottiglossa pusilla is a species of bug in the Pentatomidae family.\nCharacteristics:\nThe bedbugs become 4.5 to 6.0 millimeters long. They are pale brown in color, with paler edges on the pronotum and abdomen. A fine pale longitudinal stripe runs centrally over the pronotum and the scutellum. The relatively short and wide head is rather flattened at the front. The third limb of the antennae is a good half as long as the second. The last two limbs are dark in color.\nLifestyle:\nThe animals are found on various grasses (Poaceae), such as panicle grasses (Poa), although it is not known whether there are certain food plants. The species is also said to suck on sedges (Carex), the sourgrass family (Cyperaceae). The adults of the new generation appear from August.\nDistribution and habitat:\nThe species is widespread in the Palearctic and occurs from North Africa across Europe (with the exception of the far north) across Central Asia to China. In Central Europe, the species occurs everywhere, but is only distributed in places and only locally common. It is rarer in the north than in the south. In the Alps they can be found up to over 1000 meters above sea level. Open to half shady grass habitats are populated. In Great Britain, the species occurs locally in the south and center of England on grasslands.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2006.
red ladybug perched on leaves
Green glitter beetle on leaf.
Free Images: "bestof:Rhagonycha fulva (Common red soldier beetle), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg en Rhagonycha fulva Common red soldier beetle Arnhem the Netherlands nl Rhagonycha"
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