See a prize-winning photograph of mating golden-tabbed robber flies


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA InsectWeek22Over18-FIRSTPLACE-Burford.

A pair of mating golden-tabbed robber flies

Pete Burford

SMALL, fast and infrequently fleeting, it may be troublesome to catch bugs in all their miniaturised glory. But these close-up images emphasise the sweetness and intricacy of those critters in astonishing readability.

The images are from the Insect Week Images Competitors 2022, organised by the UK’s Royal Entomological Society as a part of its annual initiative celebrating insect science. Pete Burford scooped the highest prize for his picture, important picture, of a pair of mating golden-tabbed robber flies (Eutolmus rufibarbis), so-named for the attribute golden tufts of hair on the underside of males. Native to the UK, they’re present in heathland within the central southern and central japanese components of England, though they’re a scarce species.

Burford, who took up macro pictures two and a half years in the past, throughout one of many UK’s covid-19 lockdowns, spent a number of fruitless hours at a nature reserve just for the flies to land on his leg halfway by mating when he acquired dwelling and sat down on the couch. He managed to select them up on a stick and seize his profitable shot, entitled It Takes Two.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA InsectWeek22Over18HCommSalb2 Benjamin Salb A small damselfly native to eastern North America.

Forktail damselfly (Ischnura posita)

Benjamin Salb

Pictured above is among the competitors’s extremely recommended entries, taken by Benjamin Salb and exhibiting a fragile forktail damselfly (Ischnura posita), a species native to japanese North America. Reaching a most size of three centimetres, it is among the smaller members of the flying insect household that features dragonflies – not that this hindered Salb. He stacked a number of pictures collectively to create the sharp closing consequence.

Insect Week 2023 runs from 19 to 25 June within the UK and Europe.

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