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Beautiful red dragonfly on a stem.\nClose-up of a red colored male ruddy darter (Sympetrum sanguineum) hanging on vegetation. Resting in sunlight in a meadow.
Banded Demoiselle on a leaf
Detail closeup of a western willow emerald damselfly, Chalcolestes viridis, insect resting in the sun
The pale blue males, showing off their white legs to each other, are a familiar sight along rivers and calm streams in large parts of Europe. \nField characteristics: Tot 35-37mm, Ab 27-31mm, Hw 19-23mm.\nDistribution: occurs in a great part of Europe, but are absent in northern England, Ireland and northern Scandinavia.\nHabitat: Characteristic of floodplains, dominant on oxbows, rivers and open stretches of streams. Also lakes and a wide range of man-made habitats.\nFlight Season: From the start of May to the end of September.\n\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Hemiptera bugs in the wild, North China
Gerris lacustris Common Water Strider Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Close-up of a male Emerald Damselfly (Lestes Sponsa) holding on to a straw
Closeup of Oedemera nobilis
A closeup on a male of the  thick-legged flower beetle, Oedemera Nobilis , on a green leaf
The Hairy Dragonfly is the UK's smallest Dragonfly which emerges in May before other Hawker Dragonflies
Image of tiger beetle on green leaves on natural background. Animal. Insect.
Tot 29-34mm, Ab 18-26mm, Hw 20-30mm\nGeneral: \nThe small, all black males are a familiar sight on bogs and moors in our northern regions.\nYounger males and females are easily distinguished by the black band marked with “golden drops” on the thorax side.\nOccurrence: \nCircumboreal, ranging to Japan and across North America. Generally common, even abundant on many acidic waters.\nHabitat: \nMostly acidic waters such as bogs, moorland and heathy lakes, but also breeds in small tarns, drying ponds and ditches.\nFlight Season: \nRelative late, from mid-June to early November, most abundant in August.\n\nThis is a common Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Close up of a Capricorn Beetle on a white flower
Cuckoo wasp (aka emerald wasp) on Queen Anne's lace (aka wild carrot) in summer, Connecticut. A small, brilliantly colored, parasitic wasp that lays its eggs in the nests of other insects. So named because cuckoos (i.e., birds) are brood parasites as well.
Blue damselfly portrait shot from the side with shiny eyes with reflection on them and clear spiky hair with a beautiful green background
A sharp-tailed Leafcutter Bee, Coelioxys, gathers pollen from a  flower in autumn in the Laurentian forest.
Beautiful blue incest with long feelers, Rosalia Longicorn, Rosalia alpina, in the nature green forest habitat, sitting on the green larch, Czech republic, longhorn beetle, longicorn
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.
Longicorn on wild plants, North China
A Banded Demoiselle poised on dead grass head in sunlight
Macrophotography of a Green Emerald Damselfly (Chalcolestes viridis) with natural background. Extremely close-up and details.
Dragonfly on grass leaf (black background)
Macro of beetle of Oedemera nobilis feeding on a white edelweiss flower
Erythema of ponds is heated in the sun in summer.
Damselflies are flying insects of the suborder Zygoptera in the order Odonata. They are similar to dragonflies, which constitute the other odonatan suborder, Anisoptera, but are smaller and have slimmer bodies.
Tot 30-39mm, Ab 25-32mm, HW 19-23mm.\nOur most delicate Lestes, which is normally easily separated by its statue and coloration, although some Iberian populations recall L. barbarous.\nHabitat: A wide variety of seasonally dry shallow and reedy waters in the south, becoming more critical in the north-west, where it is most abundant in heath and bog lakes with peat moss (Sphagnum) and rushes (Juncus).\nFlight Season: Northern populations mostly emerge in July, flying into November.\nDistribution: Widespread in Europe, although seldom the dominant Lestes species. Distribution recall L. barbarous, and also tends to wander like that species, though rarely in similarly great numbers.\n\nThis Species is to be seen in the describe Habitats, but not as common as L. sponsa in the Netherlands.
blue dragonfly is sitting on grass in a meadow. insect dragonfly close up macro
Wild grasses against a green background and a male common blue damsel fly hanging from it.
musk beetle
Acanthocinus aedilis - long horned beetle - Siberian Timberman
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