no no no, like as many post as you want. There will be a voting poll that you vote on, The voting is not held by the amount of likes the pictures have.
:-) good photos are good
Is there a way this post can be pinned so that it shows up on the top of the “forums general section” ?
Query is, i suppose, for the forum admins.
Thanks
Wow those look beautiful! The lighting looks nice in that second one. Was it wild and shot at night or captive and just in front of a black background?
It looks like it was outside at night. I can see a small amount of detail in the background and the light of a window.
Thank you. All of these are photographed in the wild in Hong Kong’s country parks. @felix-insects The white rectangles you thought were windows are actually signs on a board.
Oh oops, I missed the rectangles! Wonderful work :)
Hi,
You photo is not rendering on the page (on my browser atleast) though the code text seems the same for others.
Awesome Skinks, am not sure what is going on and if there are two or is one eating the other
As there is no link to the inat observation – (i checked your inat observations and It does not seem to be there either) and for some reason i cannot see pictures of any of your observations either ?
Would you like to enter?
Well, I would, in a way. But I feel a bit abashed putting up a photo with so many absolutely smashing photos. Thank you for asking (I’m touched ), and I will see what I have anything that may be interesting, even if not aspiring to gorgeous.
Newt (Taricha torosa )
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/105313683
Sweat Bee ( Subgenus Agapostemon)
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/99951110
Sea anemone ( Anthopleura elegantissima ) consuming a crab (?)
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/82842734
These last two are fantastic!
I think all three of them are fantastic.
That ‘‘Camponotus ant’’ looks more like an alate termite to me. The pics are fantastic anyway.
Yes thank you! Actually I have been struggling to choose three. Are photos of specimens acceptable or should I choose the shots taken in their habitat?
There is no rule against it, but would prefer natural habitat.