114 pictures found
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A fly with drops of dew on its eyes Focus stacking of 40 images
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
A fly with drops of dew on its eyes Focus stacking of 40 images
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Close-up of a Jumping spider (Salticidae) with their big characteristic main eyes
© Matthias Lenke / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
© Matthias Lenke / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
Close-up of a Jumping spider (Salticidae) with their big characteristic main eyes
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Portrait of a Jumping spider
© Francisco Javier Torrent Andres / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Francisco Javier Torrent Andres / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Portrait of a Jumping spider
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Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales, x35
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales, x35
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Lycaenid butterfly wing scales, x50
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Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales
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Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Close-up of Lesser purple emperor (Apatura ilia) wing scales
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Speckled wood butterfly (Pararge aegeria) eyes. Focus stacking of 160 images
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Speckled wood butterfly (Pararge aegeria) eyes. Focus stacking of 160 images
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Eye of fruit fly (Tephritidae sp.)
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Head of fruit fly (Tephritidae sp.). Focus stacking of 220
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of fruit fly (Tephritidae sp.). Focus stacking of 220 images.
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of fruit fly (Tephritidae sp.)
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Speckled wood butterfly (Pararge aegeria) eye
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.)
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Mandibles of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.)
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Lycaenid butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Lycaenid butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.)
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Lycaenid butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Lycaenid butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.)
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Head of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.). Focus stacking of 350
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Head of a Carpenter Ant (Camponotus sp.). Focus stacking of 350 images.
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Butterfly wing scales
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Eye of a Damselfly
© Alberto Ghizzi Panizza / Biosphoto
Locust Eyes. Focus stacking of 140 images.
© Jean-Yves Grospas / Biosphoto
Madagascan sunset moth (Chrysiridia rhipheus) scales
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Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton (unidentified species). It lives dragged by the marine currents and it is common to
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton (unidentified species). It lives dragged by the marine currents and it is common to observe it in spring. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands.
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Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton (unidentified species). It lives dragged by the marine currents and it is common to
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton (unidentified species). It lives dragged by the marine currents and it is common to observe it in spring. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands.
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Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
© Sergio Hanquet / Biosphoto
Zooplankton. Pelagic micro organism that is part of plankton (unidentified species). It lives dragged by the marine currents and it is common to observe it in spring. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands.
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Microplastics on table salt. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with 5x enlargement.
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Microplastics on table salt. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with 5x enlargement. Polyester microfibres. The presence of microplastics in the seawater has been revealed as hazardous. Three possible toxic effects of plastic particle have been indicated: first due to the plastic particles themselves, second to the release of persistent organic pollutant (POPs) adsorbed to the plastics and third to the leaching of additives of the plastics. We are eating plastic particles every day indirectly by ingesting contaminated marine animals and directly through the cooking salt with which we season the food. Saline salt collected from the west coast of Portugal.
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Microplastics on table salt. Polyester microfibres. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Microplastics on table salt. Polyester microfibres. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with 5x enlargement. The presence of microplastics in the seawater has been revealed as hazardous. Three possible toxic effects of plastic particle have been indicated: first due to the plastic particles themselves, second to the release of persistent organic pollutant (POPs) adsorbed to the plastics and third to the leaching of additives of the plastics. We are eating plastic particles every day indirectly by ingesting contaminated marine animals and directly through the cooking salt with which we season the food. Saline salt collected from the west coast of Portugal.
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Microplastics on table salt. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with 5x enlargement. The
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Microplastics on table salt. Tiny fragments and filaments of plastic inside and among cuisine salt crystals photographed with 5x enlargement. The presence of microplastics in the seawater has been revealed as hazardous. Three possible toxic effects of plastic particle have been indicated: first due to the plastic particles themselves, second to the release of persistent organic pollutant (POPs) adsorbed to the plastics and third to the leaching of additives of the plastics. We are eating plastic particles every day indirectly by ingesting contaminated marine animals and directly through the cooking salt with which we season the food. Saline salt collected from the west coast of Portugal.
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Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot, sometimes
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot, sometimes ocellus, Els Ports, Ebre lands, Spain
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Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot, sometimes ocellus, Els Ports, Ebre lands, Spain
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot, sometimes ocellus, Els Ports, Ebre lands, Spain
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Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot,
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
© Juan-Carlos Muñoz / Biosphoto
Spanish moon moth (Graellsia isabella, detail of eyespot, sometimes ocellus, Els Ports, Ebre lands, Spain
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Wing scales of Urania rhipheus, macro photo, magnification ABM 10:1, Hesse, Germany, Europe
© wore49 / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
© wore49 / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
Wing scales of Urania rhipheus, macro photo, magnification ABM 10:1, Hesse, Germany, Europe
© Matthias Lenke / imageBROKER / Biosphoto
Winter moth (Operophtera brumata) male
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Death's Head Hawk-Moth (Acherontia atropos) caterpillar on
© Ralph Martin / BIA / Biosphoto
© Ralph Martin / BIA / Biosphoto
Death's Head Hawk-Moth (Acherontia atropos) caterpillar on branch, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
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Death's Head Hawk-Moth (Acherontia atropos) sitting on tree, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
© Ralph Martin / BIA / Biosphoto
© Ralph Martin / BIA / Biosphoto
Death's Head Hawk-Moth (Acherontia atropos) sitting on tree, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
© Ralph Martin / BIA / Biosphoto
Two-tailed Pasha (Charaxes jasius) portrait of head, Bosnia-Herzegovina
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A Hybomitra affinis, horse fly. Horse flies are often large and agile in flight, and the females bite animals, including humans, to obtain blood.
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
A Hybomitra affinis, horse fly. Horse flies are often large and agile in flight, and the females bite animals, including humans, to obtain blood. They prefer to fly in sunlight, avoiding dark and shady areas, and are inactive at night.
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Peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are often iridescent.
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Pholcidae, commonly known as cellar spiders, are a spider family
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Pholcidae, commonly known as cellar spiders, are a spider family in the suborder Araneomorphae. The family contains about 1500 species divided into about 80 genera.
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Brimstone moth. This species is unmistakable within its range, with bright yellow wings marked with small brown patches along the costa of the
© Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Brimstone moth. This species is unmistakable within its range, with bright yellow wings marked with small brown patches along the costa of the forewing and a small brown-edged white stigma, also on the forewing
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Detail of the ommatidea of a black soldier fly
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Detail of the ommatidea of a black soldier fly
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Black soldier flies are common and widespread fly of the family
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Black soldier flies are common and widespread fly of the family Stratiomyidae. Neither the larvae nor adults are considered pests or vectors. Instead, black soldier fly larvae play a similar role to that of redworms as essential decomposers in breaking down organic substrates and returning nutrients to the soil/environment.
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The antlions are a group of about 2,000 species of insect in the family Myrmeleontidae, known for the fiercely predatory habits of their larvae,
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
The antlions are a group of about 2,000 species of insect in the family Myrmeleontidae, known for the fiercely predatory habits of their larvae, which in many species dig pits to trap passing ants or other prey.
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Detail of the golden wings of a Bug (Haploprocta sulcicornis)
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
© Javier Torrent / Visual and Written - Photo Collection / Biosphoto
Detail of the golden wings of a Bug (Haploprocta sulcicornis)