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A small bug in the family Tingidae, showing lace pattern on elytra and hairy antennae
Larinus planus Weevil Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Full body shot of a beautiful orange/yellow looking moth with beautiful antennas almost looks like a bat
Australian native blue-banded bee resting on a leaf
Alfalfa snout beetle, Otiorhynchus ligustici on ground, macro photo.
Walking past a yellow honey locust leaf, an iridescent emerald ash borer inspects a wood plank in Littleton, Colorado.
Image of Diploptera punctata or the Pacific beetle cockroach. Insect. Animal.
Thorn-hopper on branch - looking at camera.
Multiple images of Different species and Types of Spiders, Nocturnal animal, spider at night.
Paederus littoralis Rove Beetle Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Flowers of Eyebright (Euphrasia stricta) a hemiparasite on grasses
Abantiades is a genus of moths of the family Hepialidae. There are 14 described species, all found exclusively in Australia.
Death watch beetle, Xestobium rufovillosum on wood, macro photo
spring flower
Beetle of Otiorhynchus (sometimes Otiorrhynchus) on leaf. Many of them e.i. black vine weevil (O. sulcatus) or strawberry root weevil (O. ovatus) are important pests.
Four  developing seed-pods of the Fire Añañuca (Phycella ignea) growing in the foothills of the Andes Mountains of central Chile, near the capital Santiago. When fully dried the pods will split and release the lily seeds into the summer soil.
Gopher looking out of a hole in grass feild
Apterygida media Short-Winged Earwig Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Natural closeup on a Mediterranean Rhabdorrhynchus snout weevil beetle sitting on wood
An ambush bug patiently waits for its prey in the Laurentian forest.
Lepidoptera insects in the wild, North China
white flowers in green grass
Large Pine Weevil (Hylobius abietis) eating the bark from a pine branch.
Very variable, low to medium, silkily-hairy perennial. Leaves pinnate, lowermost with 5-7 leaflets, upper with 9-15; leaflets oblong to elliptical. Flowers normally yellow, but may be red, purple, orange or white; 12-15mm, in dense heads with a leaf-like bract immediately beneath; calyx inflated, white woolly, the teeth often red-tipped.\nHabitat: Dry coastal grassland, also inland on calcareous soils, cliff tops and rock ledges, to 3000m.\nFlowering Season: June-September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the far North.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation on Terschelling (Netherlands) in September 2015.
Wild carrot in bloom.
Larvae of these beetles are xylophagous. They mainly feed on downy oak (Quercus pubescens), evergreen oak (Quercus ilex) and cork oak (Quercus suber). These longhorn beetle are considered a pest of oaks\n\nThey are considered  a danger for Quercus Forests
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white flowers
Funny image of a weevil’s poop
Beetle
Free Images: "bestof:Hasenmaus (Lagidium Cuvieri).png Lagidium viscacia / Lagidium cuvieri http //nmnhgoph si edu/cgi-bin/wdb/msw/synonyms/query/25064 Hasenmaus Lagidium viscacia"
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