For interesting information on flowers, trees and plants please click on this link: http://natureswow2.blogspot.com/

For the identification of insects and other fauna and flora of South Africa: please click on the following links:
Insects and related species: Antlions - Ants - Bees - Beetles - Bugs - Butterflies, Moths and Caterpillars - Centipedes and Millipedes - Cockroaches - Crickets - Dragonflies and Damselflies - Grasshoppers and Katydids - Mantis - Stick Insects - Ticks and Mites - Wasps - Woodlice
Plants, Trees, Flowers: (Note: Unless plants fall into a specific species such as Cacti, they have been classified by their flower colour to make them easier to find) Bonsai - Cacti, Succulents, Aloes, Euplorbia - Ferns and Cycads - Flowers - Fungi, Lichen and Moss - Grass - Trees
Animals, Birds, Reptiles etc.: Animals, Birds, Fish and Crabs - Frogs - Lizards - Scorpions - Snails and Slugs - Snakes - Spiders - Tortoise, Turtles and Terrapins - Whipscorpions
Other photography: Aeroplanes - Cars and Bikes - Travel - Sunrise - Water drops/falls - Sudwala and Sterkfontein Caves etc.
Videos: YouTube

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Kruger National Park - The other side - Part 12

It was mating season in the dung pile!! These Plum Dung beetles were extremely busy, when the males weren't fighting with each other over the females, they were mating!!
The poor females were trying to lay their eggs and did not seem to be getting very far as they were diving into the dung each time a male came near!! What a funny sight this all was. You could sit and be entertained for hours just by the goings on in the elephant dung!! LOL!!


This stinkbug (caura rufiventris) has a bright red belly to warn off predators. But who would want to eat him anyway?? LOL!!
They are normally found on indigenous potatoes.
This small bush was covered with caterpillars. I suspect that they might belong to some kind of moth but I cannot identify them from my books.


I was always under the impression that the Star Jasmine was a cultivated plant but it is growing all over in the wild.

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