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Australia, Northern Territories

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02.12.2010 23:37, Kharkovbut

6. Dragonfly. Bardedjilidji Sandstons, Kakadu National Park. October.
Rhyothemis graphiptera

02.12.2010 23:41, Kharkovbut

5. Afternoon in the bush. Butterfly, as always - on the rocks. Bardedjilidji Sandstons, Kakadu National Park. October.
Euploea core

02.12.2010 23:45, Kharkovbut

8. Another butterfly. Bitten by life on the wings. Bardedjilidji River Walk, Kakadu National Park. October.
Hypolimnas bolina

03.12.2010 9:59, Ele-W

  Rhyothemis graphiptera


Thanks! smile.gif

03.12.2010 10:05, Ele-W

  Euploea core


  Hypolimnas bolina


Thank you very much! Only now I see that these are different butterflies, but it seemed to me that they are the same. redface.gif

I signed all the titles.

This post was edited by Ele-W-03.12.2010 10: 05

04.12.2010 16:27, Arikain

"Catch" from the last trip. So-so loot, but what was caught, was caught.

1. The spider.

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Habitats.

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Nourlangie Rock, Kakadu National Park. October.


Beautiful photos!
And a spider from the Philodromidae family (Running Crab Spiders? it seems). It's probably Philodromus sp., a female, but I'm not sure.

04.12.2010 18:52, Ele-W

Beautiful photos!


Thank you. smile.gif

04.01.2011 9:07, Ele-W

We are in the midst of a wet season-it is raining, as always, there are very few insects.

I found a spider in the Botanical Garden. Jumps like a flea from a fairy tale, can't keep up with him.

Some kind of skipper (Salticidae).

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George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.

This post was edited by Ele-W-05/14/2014 12: 45
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04.01.2011 12:43, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Thank you for the cockroach!

It's a female, family Blattidae, probably a subfamily. Polyzosteriinae. More precisely, unfortunately, you can't tell from the photo.

There is nothing terrible about them, but... many polyzosteriins (like blattides) actively protected by secreting the secret of odorous glands. Just for the Australian representatives, there are simply heartbreaking descriptions of the smell! So, it's better not to sniff!

04.01.2011 14:37, Dr. Niko

We are in the midst of a wet season-it is raining, as always, there are very few insects.

I found a spider in the Botanical Garden. Jumps like a flea from a fairy tale, can't keep up with him.

George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.

Some kind of skipper (Salticidae).

04.01.2011 18:22, Ele-W

Thank you for the cockroach!


You are welcome. smile.gif

04.01.2011 18:33, Ele-W

Some kind of skipper (Salticidae).


This word first came to my mind when I saw him jumping on the leaves. smile.gif

04.01.2011 18:35, Ele-W

Curoupita guianensis (Lecythidaceae) in the Botanical Garden.

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04.01.2011 18:37, Ele-W

And this is the burst fruit under kurupita and the tumultuous life around the tree.

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04.01.2011 18:38, Ele-W

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04.01.2011 18:39, Ele-W

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04.01.2011 18:40, Ele-W

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04.01.2011 18:41, Ele-W

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George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.
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05.01.2011 6:39, Ele-W

From the life of green tree ants. Wet season, Botanical Garden.

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05.01.2011 6:42, Ele-W

Oecophylla smaragdina.

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05.01.2011 6:43, Ele-W

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George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.
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06.01.2011 9:34, Ele-W

Mukha 1.

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George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.
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06.01.2011 9:34, Ele-W

Mukha 2.

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George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens, NT, Australia. December.
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06.01.2011 9:36, Ele-W

And flies fly to freshly hatched mushrooms

Networm, or Dictyophora (Dictyophora sp., Phallaceae)

The aroma there is unforgettable. smile.gif

06.01.2011 19:56, Arikain

I'm not a dipterologist, but these flies don't happen to be Sarcophaga sp. and Lucillia sp. 1 and 2 respectively confused.gif?

30.01.2011 10:15, Ele-W

Agent El reports! smile.gif

During the wet season, there are more insects in the bush and they are easier to find. Not that they're really swarming, but with a certain amount of patience... You need to look on the wrong side of the palm leaves, they hide there from the rain. smile.gif
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30.01.2011 10:22, Ele-W

Spiders.

1. A very small spider.

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30.01.2011 10:23, Ele-W

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
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30.01.2011 10:34, Ele-W

2. Family Araneidae, probably female ©

A very well-fed creature. But nervous, even, I would say, hysterical.

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This post was edited by Ele-W-06.02.2011 16: 16
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30.01.2011 10:35, Ele-W

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
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30.01.2011 10:41, Ele-W

3. The Araneidae family ©

This seems to be a small version of a well-fed tantrum.

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-06.02.2011 16: 22
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30.01.2011 10:51, Ele-W

4.

Another little girl who stubbornly sat in her "house" and refused to be photographed in a different pose.

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30.01.2011 12:03, Tigran Oganesov

Spiders.

1. A very small spider.

Similar to our lynx spiders (family Oxyopidae)

01.02.2011 11:11, Ele-W

Similar to our lynx spiders (family Oxyopidae)


The lynx spider sounds very romantic. smile.gif

01.02.2011 11:12, Ele-W

5. This spider seems to have died. But I took a picture of it anyway.

Maybe from the Heteropodidae (Huntsman)? ©

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This post was edited by Ele-W-11.02.2011 15: 18
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01.02.2011 11:13, Ele-W

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
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01.02.2011 11:14, Ele-W

6. Tetragnatha sp., male. ©

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This post was edited by Ele-W-11.02.2011 15: 15
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01.02.2011 11:15, Ele-W

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01.02.2011 11:16, Ele-W

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
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01.02.2011 11:20, Ele-W

7. Linyphiidae? ©

A very small spider, I could barely see it. I was sitting in a dark place under the leaves.

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Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-06.02.2011 16: 26
Likes: 3

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