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too many targets

Started 5 months ago | Photos
macrouser
macrouser Senior Member • Posts: 3,979
too many targets
5

Australian native stingless bee on ranunculus flower.

The following photos are all from this patch of creeping oxalis.

I don't have an ID for this fly.

It looks like it could be one of the less well known fruit flies.

It looks like a female

I wasn't nearly close enough to get a better photo of this wasp.

This fly is much larger than the first one.  It is still a small fly.

This fly is in family Chloropidae.  The common name is frit fly.   It is less than 2 mm long.

I still don't know what this is.

I moved on from there.

I think this is another species of frit fly.

It was sitting on a bean leaf and the wind was making life hard for me.  It flew away before I could do any better.

This is the larva of the green lacewing.

It will eat anything that is small and soft enough to eat.  They like aphids very much.

This is a steel blue  ladybird beetle.  halmus chalybeus

This is the larva of the steel blue ladybird beetle.

This is a lantana tree hopper

I was so exhausted I was hoping there wouldn't be anything else to photograph.

 macrouser's gear list:macrouser's gear list
Sony SLT-A77 Sony a7R III Sigma 150mm F2.8 EX DG Macro HSM Sony FE 90mm F2.8 macro Sony FE 70-300mm F4.5-5.6 G OSS +2 more
BlueRay2 Forum Pro • Posts: 14,816
Re: too many targets

#1 and #4 are my picks.

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The eye sees all but the mind shows us what we want. w, Shakespeare

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