Robber fly's supper
Assassin bug with built-in warning
Assassin bug, business end
Indian strawberry
Something we like to see
Black-and-orange roughy
If Picasso had been a scientific illustrator
Too big to be a yellow jacket . . .
Egg watch day 15: raided!
Another assassin bug
Romantic portrait of a robber fly
A very tiny crane fly?
Golden tortoise beetle, backlit
Green scarab, ventral
Green scarab
Leaf hopper spreads its wings
Egg watch, day 16: that's that!
Tiny cowrie beetle
All eyes
Another nervous wasp
When flies grow old
A newer fly
Another unusual Queen Anne's lace
Another pollinator
And a pollinator visits the purple-edged Queen Ann…
Big spider, other side
Big spider, big web, big catch
Detail of purple Queen Anne's lace
An unusual variation
Egg watch, day 13: more subtle changes
The kisser of the spider woman
Dinky fly and extraordinary luck
Networking
Dangling from a hickory tree
Streamlined, flying grasshopper
Nervous red wasp on glass
Egg watch, day 10: Hatchery?
Egg watch, day 9: subtle changes
Looks like what a bird left behind
A Japanese beetle scrum
Spider day continues
Ghostly countenance
Rainbow connection . . .
Morning rebuild
Egg watch day 8: an experiment
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Five-lined skink steps out
The bane of crawling beasties, the five-lined skink, Plestiodon fasciatus, is common in much of the U.S. and southern Canada. Juveniles have bright blue tails.
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