prosopocoilus zebra beetle zebra crawling on floor

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2013-09-15

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prosopocoilus zebra beetle zebra crawling on floor.

This photo resource includes the following elements:

Stripes,Black,White,Brown,Zebra,Stripe,Shell,Insect,Detail,Striped,Closeup,Isolated,Arthropod,Arthropoda,Arthropodology,Beetle,Bug,Carapace,Close,Close up,Coleoptera,Crawler,Creepy,Critter,Details,Entomological,Entomology,Fauna,Invertebrate,Isolate,Isolation,Macro,Maroon,Noboyukii,Prosopocoilus,Taxidermied,Taxidermy,Tiny,Up

This vector contains the following main colors: White,Celeste,Mine Shaft,Ironside Gray,Black
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beetle wiki:
>For other uses, see Beetle (disambiguation). Adephaga Archostemata Myxophaga Polyphaga See subgroups of the order Coleoptera Beetles are one of the main groups of insects. Their order, Coleoptera (meaning "sheathed wing"), has more species in it than any other order in the entire animal kingdom. Forty percent of all described insect species are beetles (about 350,000 species), and new species are regularly discovered. Estimates put the total number of species — described and undescribed — at between 5 and 8 million. This is why, when J. B. S. Haldane, a British geneticist, was asked what his studies of nature revealed about God, he replied, "An inordinate fondness for beetles". See more at Wikipedia.org...

zebra wiki:
ga">Equus quagga Equus grevyi *See Equus for other species. Zebras are members of the horse family native to central and southern Africa. All have vividly contrasting black and white vertical stripes (hence the zebra crossing named after it) on the forequarters, often tending towards the horizontal at the rear of the animal. Originally, most zoologists assumed that the stripes acted as a camouflage mechanism, while others believed them to play a role in social interactions, with slight variations of the pattern allowing the animals to distinguish between individuals. A more recent theory, supported by experiment, posits that the disruptive coloration is an effective means of confusing the visual system of the blood-sucking tsetse fly. See more at Wikipedia.org...


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