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rsbfotos | all galleries >> MACRO Galleries >> Common Lacewing (Neuroptera Chrysopidae) > Lacewing Larvae Hatching
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20-AUG-2006

Lacewing Larvae Hatching

New Lacwing larvae completing its emergence from the egg sac.

A just hatched Lacewing insect larvae on the egg no larger than the head of a sewing needle. Image cropped and Sharpened in Picasa.

Mother Nature has developed this ingenious method to perpetuate the Lacewing. Immature lacewings are fierce hunters, and if eggs hatched,
the young would quickly devour one another. The female Lacewing deposits each egg at the end of a stalk, so by the time a newly hatched
Aphid Wolf or Aphid Lion climbs down, its brothers and sisters have already wandered away.
Green Lacewing Larvae, known as an Aphid Wolf will often cover themselves with debris including the empty skins of their victims, as camouflage.

Hand held, took 70 to 80 images to get a few usable. Shot with the FZ30 lens at 420mm plus three stacked macro lenses.
A Nikon T-6 (2.9 diop); Nikon T-5 (1.5 diop); and Raynox CM-2000 Macro Explorer 2.5x(8.0 Diop).

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30
1/40s f/8.0 at 84.6mm iso80 full exif

other sizes: small medium original auto
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