dragonfly macro stopping yellow grass in water

File

License + info

Please Check the original Web

Date

2013-11-19

Source

Colors

View 182 times seen 17 downloads
dragonfly macro stopping yellow grass in water.
Nov. 8 - Scientists in the US are planning to map the brain activity of the dragonfly as it hunts, using a specially built backpack to transmit electrical signals from the insect's active neurons to a computer. The researchers believe that, if successful, their experiments could shed light on how the human brain functions and how degenerative... See more that Dragonfly backpacks to probe secrets of the brain

This vector contains the following main colors: Costa Del Sol,Cape Palliser,Buccaneer,Nutmeg Wood Finish,Gurkha
Other files that may of interest to you
dragonfly close-up wings animal
dragonfly animal insect stopping on hand
dragonfly animal
butterfly bug insect stopping on mud surface
dragonfly macro insect stopping on tree branch
dragonfly wings animal close-up stopping on stick
dragonfly macro wings stopping on stick of water
dragonfly macro stopping on mud close-up
dragonfly animal with lucid wings insect stopping on green grass
dragonfly animal wings insect macro with green nature background
Dragonfly wiki:
>For other uses, see Dragonfly (disambiguation). Aeshnidae Austropetaliidae Cordulegastridae Corduliidae Gomphidae Libellulidae Neopetaliidae Petaluridae A dragonfly (also known as devil's darning needle) is an insect belonging to the order Odonata, the suborder Epiprocta and, in the strict sense, the infraorder Anisoptera. It is characterized by large multifaceted eyes, two pairs of strong transparent wings, and an elongated body. Conventionally, the Anisoptera were given suborder rank besides the "ancient dragonflies" (Anisozygoptera, 2 living species and numerous fossil ones), but it has been determined recently that the Anisozygoptera form a paraphyletic assemblage of primitive relatives of the Anisoptera. Thus, the Anisoptera are reduced to an infraorder, forming the new suborder Epiprocta (dragonflies in a general sense). The artificial grouping Anisozygoptera is disbanded, its members being recognized as largely extinct offshoots at various stages of dragonfly evolution. Dragonflies typically eat mosquitoes, midges and other small insects like flies, bees, and butterflies. They are usually found around lakes, ponds, streams, and wetlands because their larvae, known as "nymphs", are aquatic. Dragonflies do not bite or sting humans. In fact, they are valued as a predator that helps control the populations of insects that do, such as mosquitoes. See more at Wikipedia.org...


Popular searches