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hornet nest of carnivore or Vespa affinis
Open wasp nest close up
Nest of Eurasian penduline tit (Remiz pendulinus)
Mud birds nest in a tree, possibly of a Horner in Costa Rica, Central America.
Asian wasp nest, Vespa velutina in a tree. Spain.
Wasp nest in a eucalyptus tree in the Australian bushland
Hornets nest with yellow jacket wasps crawling across the top
A wasp nest hanging from a tree branch. Western Oregon. Edited.
Hornet's nest hanging from the branches of a tree in Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem, New York City, in the fall
Honeybee swarm in central Florida
A macro of a small nest of wasp.
Close-up of a wasp nest found in the bushes
Tree squirrel nest high up in a leafy tree in soft focus
Ant nest's entrance - animal behavior.
The yellow wasp's nest broke and fell down.
A live wasp nest hanging from a tree branch.
close up ofa big Wasp's or hornets's nest on tree.
Nest of Indian Giant Bees, aka Giant Honey Bees, aka Rock Bees, Apis dorsata, on a tree in Sunderbans National Park, India, covered with bees from the colony. The nest is often called a comb, and sometimes called a bee hive.
Huge Wasp's nest.A large wasp hornet nest affixed to a green tree.
Located close to Aarhus. Space for text
nest of asian hornets in close up
Image taken at Riugi Kojima Square in São José dos Campos, São Paulo, Brazil.
Wasp nest that fell on the ground
The nest of the eastern grey squirrel high in the trees in winter with two squirrels perched in the branches beneath it. Sciurus carolinensis, or the eastern gray squirrel or grey squirrel can be grey or black in color, in this image, you see both color varieties under their nest.
Cliff swallow mud nests
a wasp nest on a road sign
L 13,5-15 cm. \nBreeds commonly and colonially  in villages, farms, towns, also all kinds of open country; attached to houses, but also cliff faces in undeveloped areas. Summer visitor (April-October), winters in Africa. Outside breeding period roosts commonly in trees (not reeds).\nConfident towards humans, building its closed, convex mud nest beneath eaves on house walls, on bridge girders etc..\nWhen young have fledged, birds often perch in numbers on telephone wires.\nHunts insects at all levels, but often high in air.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Large wasp nest in a tree
Social Spiderweb (Stegodyphus) in Etosha National Park at Kunene Region, Namibia
Free Images: "bestof:Guaya-wasp-nest-entrance.jpg The entrance to a paper-wasp nest on the lowest branches of a very dense dark-green Guaya tree Talisia olivaeformis JIM CONRAD'S"
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