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Clausiliidae Door Snail. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
Clausiliidae, also known by their common name the door snails
A forest butterfly which is commonly sighted in the forest reserve of Singapore.  Family : LycaenidaeSubfamily : Lycaeninaehttp://www.geocities.com/rainforest/vines/2382/lycaenidae/celeno.htm
Sea slater
Common Land Snail of the Genus Corona
Chrysomela Populi on a flower spreading it´s shell in back lit light
Rockskipper also known as combtooth blenny, resting on rocks on ilot sancho island, Mauritius
a fly larva clings to a roack in the Middle Fork of the Flathead River, Montana
Armadillidium pallasii (frontirostre) on a bark
Beetle
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Zebra mussels, Dreissena polymorpha, grown on a painters mussel, in sandy sediment and shallow water.
air-breathing sea slug, a shell-less marine pulmonate gastropod mollusk, in the family Onchidiidae. Marine species. Found on intertidal mudflat, Thailand.
Aquatic snail Tylomelania - Poso Rabbit Snail
A Hermit Crab - Clibanarius aequabilis
Ligia occidentalis is a species of rock slater in the family Ligiidae. Habitat generalist of rocky shores. Baja California Sur, Mexico.
Ligia exotica is a crustacean that lives along the coast.
Blue Pierrot Butterfly was clicked using Mobile Macro photography . These are the images shot on iphone12 with a macro lens.
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empty snail shell hanging from the end of a grass leaf
A 3D illustration of the extinct Trilobite Paradoxides on a pebble beach 500 million years ago.
Tot 50-55mm, Ab, 37-42mm, Hw 30-35mm.\nIdentification:\nThe characters of this clubtail are rather different . It prefers very large (lowland) rivers and may easily be overlooked. Populations can best be found by searching for exuviae on river banks.\nOccurrence:\nA north Asian species, with western outposts in large rivers such as the Rhine, Loire and Po. Common in large lowland rivers in eastern Europe, but staged a strong comeback in Western Europe in the 1990s. Now abundant in rivers such as the Rhine, Elbe and Danube, right down to their estuaries.\nHabitat:\nSlow flowing lower sections of large rivers with sandy beds. Larvae burrow shallowly in fine substrates with relatively high concentrations of organic matter.\nFlight Season:\nLate and protracted, compared with other Gomphus species, from early June to early October, with maximum emergence in June and July.\n\nThis is a scarce Gomphus Species along the large Dutch Rivers. This Picture is made along the River Waal, near “Slot Loevestein” in the Province of Gelderland.
Barnacles grow on coastal rocks in North China
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Metalmark moth with colourful dots
Insect exuviae remains of an exoskeleton of an insect. Life cycle in a natural ecosystem
Small cabbage white butterfly chrysalis Pieris rapae, cocoon
With transparent wings, a caddisfly perches on granite boulder along the South Platte River in Waterton Canyon, Littleton, Colorado.
Coenobita clypeatus
Beetle
Free Images: "bestof:Naturalis Biodiversity Center - Cerithidea decollata (Linnaeus, 1767) - Potamididae - Mollusc shell.jpg artwork Dimensions artwork Document type Potamididae"
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