In the Lepidoptera order of the animal kingdom, it’s butterflies who get all the glory. But we’d argue it’s their relatives, moths, that have the better story. With more than 160,000 species of moths around the world, moths outnumber butterfly species roughly 10 to 1. While most are nocturnal, the hummingbird hawk-moth on our homepage today breaks the mold. Found throughout Africa, Asia, and Europe, it’s shown here in the daylight of southern Sardinia, sipping nectar with its straw-like appendage known as a proboscis. Like a hummingbird, the moth makes a soft buzzing sound as it hovers over the flowers whose nectar it feeds on exclusively.
Let’s go mothing
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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New Years Eve
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Everglades National Park turns 75
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Corn maze in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania
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Signs of life in the Empty Quarter
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Devils Tower National Monument, Wyoming
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Giving Tuesday
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Satla marshland in Bangladesh
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Portland celebrates its bounty
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Colorful houses of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain
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Go with the rainbow flow
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Where can you find a red fox?
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Merry and bright
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Once upon a time there was a bridge…
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Celebrating Native American Heritage Month
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Can you see the family resemblance?
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Great on so many levels
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Red deer stag in De Hoge Veluwe National Park, Netherlands
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Honoring the first American woman in space
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Beethoven s 250th
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Visiting Ahch-To on Star Wars Day
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Innerdalsvatna Lake, near Ålvundeidet, Norway
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Capitol Reef National Park, Utah
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First day of summer
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International Haiku Poetry Day
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National Park Week: Olympic National Park, Washington
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Al-Khazneh in Petra, Jordan
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Jan van Eyckplein in Bruges, Belgium
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Happy 50th for the National Trails System!
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Guilin and Lijiang River National Park, China
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World Bee Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

