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23rd August 2014, 11:44 PM
#1
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23rd August 2014, 11:49 PM
#2
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
All good images, Suzan, but that 4th is a standout for me. I like the way the shallow DoF makes the stamens(?) appear to be floating against a creamy background.
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24th August 2014, 12:03 AM
#3
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Hi Suzan, sorry I cannot help with the I.D but your images are super, well captured
David
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24th August 2014, 01:09 AM
#4
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Susan...I can'f find a favourite.... they are all beautiful and well shot. I cannot offer and CC either because I cannot nit. #2 and #3 -- I have seen in my backyard but never get the chance to photograph them so I cannot help with the ID either. Sorry...
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24th August 2014, 01:11 AM
#5
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Well done Suzan a very good series. There is absolutely no reason to consider it would be advantageous to stack these images, they would NOT be improved on.
I love your composition in No 2 and you have captured the unknown bug really well.
No 4 beautiful !
Grahame
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24th August 2014, 02:57 AM
#6
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
I really nice set Suzan. Must say that on #4 I did a double take, I really like the effect that you achieved on it
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24th August 2014, 08:24 AM
#7
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
All sharp with no specular highlights. Not easy to do. Four nice shots. The butterfly looks like a Ringlet - Aphantopus Hyperanthus but I'm no expert (Geoff?). Can't help with the other IDs I'm afraid.
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24th August 2014, 09:11 AM
#8
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
They are all nice but #4 is great
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24th August 2014, 09:30 AM
#9
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Lovely images Susan and I think No. 4 is a great creative piece of art.
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24th August 2014, 09:41 AM
#10
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
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24th August 2014, 09:54 AM
#11
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Nicely done, I really like the last one.
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24th August 2014, 01:15 PM
#12
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
Thank you all for the kind comments. Thanks also to John for attempting to ID the butterfly. I have googled the name and it definitely does resemble that particular species. The web site I was at indicated that Aphantopus Hypoanthus is a Western European butterfly, but my visitor does look similar so perhaps he is a North American sub species of some kind. I still cannot figure out what that bee-like creature may be. On a side note, I have definitely noticed a decline in bees this summer. Local bee keepers lost many colonies due to an extremely harsh winter and some type of mite appears to be reducing populations everywhere. We had best hope for a comeback as we'll be in deep trouble without these pollinators.
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24th August 2014, 01:28 PM
#13
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
very nice photos. I agree with several others: number 4 is my favorite.
I can't help much with the IDs. I would guess the first is some kind of wasp, but I don't know what kind. The head seems clearly the hymenoptera type--check the placement of the eyes and the head shape. Lots of bees, wasps, and ants look a lot like this. The huge mandibles suggest that it is a wasp, not any kind of bee. That's as far as my speculation goes.
The third is hard to make out, but I think it is a butterfly rather than a moth. Butterflies generally have knobs at the ends of the antennae, while moths often have feathery endings.
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24th August 2014, 06:33 PM
#14
Re: Garden Macros and Bug IDs
If these were shot in the UK I would be thinking about one of the Leaf Cutter Bees (Megachile family). It has two sub marginal wing cells which would fit. But that is just a suggestion, bees are often tricky.
And yes, the butterfly does rather look like a European Ringlet but there may well be other similar species which you get over there.
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