Frozen spider webs.
Paper wasps turned this guitar into a hive.
This mosquito mistakenly stung a kiwi and passed away from the shock of the sourness.
A bee was found inside this store honey.
Seconds before a carpenter bee crashed into the camera.
A praying mantis on the windshield looks bigger than it actually is.
Bee sleeping on a honeycomb doormat.
A tiny spider creating a string of web across this person’s arm hair.
Swarm of bees under a pedestrian traffic light.
Spider footprints across this bathroom window.
A soccer ball with tiny grasshoppers.
Some grasshoppers use bright colors as a form of camouflage, helping them to blend in with their surroundings or mimic other animals in order to avoid detection. The bright colors on grasshoppers are an important adaptation that helps these insects survive and thrive in their environments.
Just a theory, but it can also be that these grasshoppers think that this giant green soccer ball is their parent so they get attracted to it.
A pure golden honeybee, otherwise known as a Cordovan.
A cordovan is a subset race of the widely spread Italian honey bee. The pure yellow trait was originally bred as a genetic marker, so that beekeepers know that their bloodlines are pure as long as the bees are pure golden. These bees are also known for their docility, and large honey production.
Someone accidentally found a pink grasshopper while mowing their lawn. Pink grasshoppers are usually native to Europe and Asia so to see one in the States is an extremely rare chance of only 1%
Ants ate this lollipop completely but the wrapper is still intact.
Road sign wishing butterflies a good migration south for the winter.
Bee walking trail on fogged glass.
A million mosquitoes, caught in a trap in Florida.