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geoff
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At a glance it looks like one of the Oedemera species, hard to confirm 100% from a piccy, but if I was a gamblin' man I'd go for Oedemera nobilis, male at top, female below - hope that helps!

 

Cheers :thumbup1:

 

The visual differentiation in the sexes being the rear legs?

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Here's one bug(ger) trying to scare off anyone coming to close, the caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-moth (Deilephila elpenor), a perfect example of mimicry by imitating a small snake raising his head with fake eyes and threatening :sneaky2: to "bite" when touched. And on top of this, its "skin" also looks like the scaly skin of a snake. The "Elephant" caterpillar lives on Epilobium, Oenonthera and Fuchsia species.

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Couple of shots,battle scarred ladybird eating a greenfly,and a small dragonfly from the pond.

 

 

Fab pictures again :thumbup:

 

I'm starting to get into the onatas (damsel and dragonflies) and I reckon that's an immature male large red damselfly.

 

 

 

 

 

(That's what my book says, anyway :blushing:)

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