Insects, Bugs and More in 3D
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Score |
Visits |
Title |
Description |
Snail (Steve Boddy) |
Snail photographer Steve Boddy A single, slow-creeping gastropod. Four retractable horns on head, two with eyes on the tips. Seeking same. |
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Woodlouse (Steve Boddy) |
Woodlouse on a Stalk photographer Steve Boddy Usually found under rotting logs or damp stones. |
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Kiku Fly (John Goodman) |
Irresistible Fields of Gold photographer John Goodman November, 2000 Chrysanthemum bonsai blossoms, with rummaging fly. Camera: Minolta, with twin "one shot" plastic macro lenses mounted in reverse ring. |
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Flies (John Billingham) |
Flies Having a Little Chat photographer John Billingham (What do flies talk about ?) This was taken with a digital camera on a slide bar, the flies obliging by holding VERY still! |
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Hornworm (Dennis Hanser) |
Hornworm photographer Dennis Hanser A tomato hornworm that has been parasitized by a wasp. The larvae have lived inside the hornworm until ready to pupate and have just emerged enmasse and spun their pupal cases. Shortly, they all hatched into winged wasps and left the host hornworm to die a slow death. Photographed on a tomato plant from my garden with a minolta 100 mm bellows lens and two small flash units. Sequential shots were taken for the left and right images. |
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Earwig (David W. Kesner) |
Earwig For Dinner photographer David W. Kesner An earwig caught in a spiderweb with the spider ready to eat it. The background is a wooden fence near the ground where the web is located. |
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Fruitfly (William Carter, Ph.D.) |
Fruitfly's Head photographer William Carter, Ph.D. This is the top of a fruit fly's head shot through a microscope. I used a Canon XL, which has a much smaller imaging area than the 35mm camera for which the microscope's optics were designed for... So at 4x, it looks like I was shooting at a higher power. |
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Paperwasp (David W. Kesner) |
Paperwasp Nest photographer David W. Kesner A paperwasp nest with adults and various stages of larva and pupa. It was photographed on a friend's wooden fence. |
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Beefly (David W. Kesner) |
Beefly photographer David W. Kesner BeeFly is a fly that minics the look of a bee. It was photographed on the side of my house. |