Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 30 8:47 am)
Okay, now THIS is a challenge!! I'm so pleased to see you used one of my butterfly shots for your intro montage ... it's one of a very, very, very small handful I've ever done in that category. If they hadn't been swarming, I never would have got 'em! LOL! I'll give it a go, but my best is usually something really far away and blurry. I saw two really big, fluffy bees today. They blew by me at about 20 or 30 miles an hour. That's my normal insect encounter! :P Still ... I'll look forward to seeing what everybody gets. If you don't see any pics from me in this challenge, you'll know why! :)
"If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough." ... Robert Capa
@ Christo, Your photo's are great, and I love the flower very much too! :)
@ Clive, Oh, I think you've asked this grasshopper to pose for you, because the chalenge, Clive. And you have made a beautiful picture of it.
It's a great topic for this month, Clive. I've seen several kinds of butterflies in our garden. Everything is much earlier this year because the temperatures are abnormally high.
@ Tara, you have to go hunting for insects, my friend. You know, in the vicinity of horses, are many fly :D
On Saturday I turned over a leaf and was amazed to find this! A bit of reseach revealed that it is a Aspidomorpha tecta (Fool’s Gold Beetle).
I have never seen one before so this was a wonderful find for me! ☺ As my son says it looks like a contact lens with a 'flying squirrel' on its back!
PS: click the image to see a larger 800 x 600 in a new window.
Here is a shot of a larva stage of the Fool's Gold Beetle (Aspidomorpha tecta) that I posted yesterday.
Fool’s Gold beetle larvae do not discard the shed skins from moults but instead pile them up into a tail on the tip of the abdomen together with some of their excreta. Larvae wave this tail around when disturbed so possibly it is used for warding off predators and parasitoids.
Wow! What an education!
PS: click the image to see a larger 800 x 600 in a new window.
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** **As our seasons change around the world,
there are plenty of insects busy getting ready
for their life changes and metamorphosis.
** How many creepy-crawliess can you find!**
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