Shieldbug bubble blowing
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Shieldbug bubble blowing
Spotted a shieldbug sitting on a pear leaf in the garden. Managed to cut the leaf off and put it on a sunchair for easier shooting without disturbing the shield bug at all. Did some focus stack sequences and then it lowered it's proboscis and started blowing bubbles for me. Not seen a shieldbug do this before.
It was returned to the pear tree after still sitting on it's leaf.
All shots focus stacked using zerene stacker.
Not sure if moving the bug to a sunchair counts as a studio shot or not ?
brian v.
It was returned to the pear tree after still sitting on it's leaf.
All shots focus stacked using zerene stacker.
Not sure if moving the bug to a sunchair counts as a studio shot or not ?
brian v.
www.flickr.com/photos/lordv
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
Wow! Wow! and Triple Wow! Brian,
This set is one of your best I think.........These have to be prize winners:
I keep coming back to view them:
I really must get down to practising your hand stacking techniques......I did try with my shield bug the other day....without success:
Your MPE65 lens is one amazing bit of kit.......................once again ..................you are a real inspiration:
Your technique is just to steady your camera on a nearby solid surface....yes???
sonyalpha
This set is one of your best I think.........These have to be prize winners:
I keep coming back to view them:
I really must get down to practising your hand stacking techniques......I did try with my shield bug the other day....without success:
Your MPE65 lens is one amazing bit of kit.......................once again ..................you are a real inspiration:
Your technique is just to steady your camera on a nearby solid surface....yes???
sonyalpha
Retired but not old in spirit:
Fairly new to photography........keen to learn:
Fairly new to photography........keen to learn:
Thanks SAsonyalpha wrote:Wow! Wow! and Triple Wow! Brian,
This set is one of your best I think.........These have to be prize winners:
I keep coming back to view them:
I really must get down to practising your hand stacking techniques......I did try with my shield bug the other day....without success:
Your MPE65 lens is one amazing bit of kit.......................once again ..................you are a real inspiration:
Your technique is just to steady your camera on a nearby solid surface....yes???
sonyalpha
Yes for these I was either resting the lens on the sunchair or on my lefthand on the sun chair. The shieldbug just sat there watching what I was doing so I could also move the leaf around to get different shooting angles.
Brian v.
www.flickr.com/photos/lordv
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
It may be a way of getting rid of excessive water from the sap it sucks.
Note in the following link the sap the spittlebug ingests is 99% water:-
http://homepage.mac.com/keithmjohnson/s ... ubbles.pdf
Honeydew was probably originally the way aphids got rid of the excess water and sugars they did not need in order to get enough of the other nutrients, only later to evolve into a symbiotic relationship with ants. Maybe flies and other bugs get rid of these excesses by mouth?
However it may be a fright reaction on being cornered, expelling its recent meal ready for flight as a distraction method? Some animals (including humans?) urinate when they feel cornered before fleeing, no doubt in evolutionary terms as a distraction method before flight.
DaveW
Note in the following link the sap the spittlebug ingests is 99% water:-
http://homepage.mac.com/keithmjohnson/s ... ubbles.pdf
Honeydew was probably originally the way aphids got rid of the excess water and sugars they did not need in order to get enough of the other nutrients, only later to evolve into a symbiotic relationship with ants. Maybe flies and other bugs get rid of these excesses by mouth?
However it may be a fright reaction on being cornered, expelling its recent meal ready for flight as a distraction method? Some animals (including humans?) urinate when they feel cornered before fleeing, no doubt in evolutionary terms as a distraction method before flight.
DaveW
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Re: Shieldbug bubble blowing
Lovely shots, Brian. Great color and texture. The focus stacking enhances without becoming obvious by itself.
--Rik
Me either. So then another way to think about it is "where would these images fit by appearance?" To my eye they're definitely at home here in Nature.LordV wrote:Not sure if moving the bug to a sunchair counts as a studio shot or not ?
--Rik
Thanks for the comments all- appreciated
Dave,
Don't think this was a startle reaction, shieldbugs will normally just walk off in the opposite direction or if really scared give off exudate from glands on the thorax. Bugs that excrete honeydew do it at the other end:).
This looked like more what happens when a fly blows drops (mind you don't think anybody actually knows why they do it either but lots of theories).
The blowing of the bubbles seems to take a lot of concentration by the insect and they become semi-oblivious to what is going on around them.
Brian v.
Dave,
Don't think this was a startle reaction, shieldbugs will normally just walk off in the opposite direction or if really scared give off exudate from glands on the thorax. Bugs that excrete honeydew do it at the other end:).
This looked like more what happens when a fly blows drops (mind you don't think anybody actually knows why they do it either but lots of theories).
The blowing of the bubbles seems to take a lot of concentration by the insect and they become semi-oblivious to what is going on around them.
Brian v.
www.flickr.com/photos/lordv
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
Very nice!
I can even see the structure of the leaf reflected through the bubble.
It is part of the leaf that is not in the focus of the lens, right?
Is there a possibility, theoretically, that the bubble reflects the part of leaf (focused), which is itself in the focus of the lens, with stacking no deeper than this?
Which would be more relevant, the distance from the bubble to the leaf, angle of shot, or something else?
Bubble picture is a bit intrigue. Bubble seems to be divided into two parts.
The upper part which has the reflection of the leaf and smaller lower part without it.
Is the dividing line actually the edge of the leaf?
I can even see the structure of the leaf reflected through the bubble.
It is part of the leaf that is not in the focus of the lens, right?
Is there a possibility, theoretically, that the bubble reflects the part of leaf (focused), which is itself in the focus of the lens, with stacking no deeper than this?
Which would be more relevant, the distance from the bubble to the leaf, angle of shot, or something else?
Bubble picture is a bit intrigue. Bubble seems to be divided into two parts.
The upper part which has the reflection of the leaf and smaller lower part without it.
Is the dividing line actually the edge of the leaf?
The meaning of beauty is in sharing with others.
P.S.
Noticing of my "a" and "the" and other grammar
errors are welcome.
P.S.
Noticing of my "a" and "the" and other grammar
errors are welcome.
- rjlittlefield
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MacroLuv, the small drop of water is not reflecting the leaf, it is refracting it. A small drop of water acts like a short wide-angle lens. It takes light coming from behind the drop and focuses it to form a small inverted image in front of the drop. A large depth of field would be required to have both the small inverted image and the leaf it represents be in focus at the same time.
I believe the "dividing line" you see in the bubble is an in-focus image of the same brownish line that you can see severely out of focus underneath the bug. Perhaps Brian remembers what that was physically?
--Rik
I believe the "dividing line" you see in the bubble is an in-focus image of the same brownish line that you can see severely out of focus underneath the bug. Perhaps Brian remembers what that was physically?
--Rik
Thanks for the comments
Think the line in the drop refaction is the leaf edge with the white sunchair beyond it.
Dave - you may be right re the bubble blowing fright distraction - found the self same shieldbug yesterday - took a few shots and it started blowing droplets again ! or maybe it's a natural performer in front of the camera
Brian v.
Think the line in the drop refaction is the leaf edge with the white sunchair beyond it.
Dave - you may be right re the bubble blowing fright distraction - found the self same shieldbug yesterday - took a few shots and it started blowing droplets again ! or maybe it's a natural performer in front of the camera
Brian v.
www.flickr.com/photos/lordv
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
Thanks Paul for the commentspbertner wrote:Very impressive Brian, lovely subdued colours in the leaf, I always find the undersides of leaves to detract but here it works very well. Last shot is just stunning! Penultimate pic the white in the background is a little distracting, but only just,
Must admit I rather like the more subtle colour and veining you often find on the underside of leaves - I did try a some differential hand stacking with #3 see below to reduce the background interference but preferred the full stack.
Brian V.
www.flickr.com/photos/lordv
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65
canon20D,350D,40D,5Dmk2, sigma 105mm EX, Tamron 90mm, canon MPE-65