mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Sikorsky R-4 Hoverfly KK995 - ERoyal Air Force - Sikorsky R-4 Hoverfly KK995 / E, at RAF north Weald, for the the Royal Observer Corps Stand-down ceremony on 24 June 1945. Date: 1945
Exotic cicadas and waspsSpeckled black cicada, Gaeana maculata 1, Platypleura capensis 2, Lystra lanata 3, Andrena thoracica 4, Acrotelsa collaris 5, hoverfly, Milesia virginiensis 6, and paper wasp, polistes annularis 7
Sikorsky R-4 Hoverfly II, KK991, at the 1949 Royal Aeron?Sikorsky R-4 Hoverfly II, KK991, at the 1949 Royal Aeronautical Society Garden Party at White Waltham Aerodrome on 8 May
Sikorsky R6 Hoverfly II
Sikorsky R4 Hoverfly I KK984 flying at AndoverSikorsky R4 Hoverfly I, KK984, flying at Andover
Sikorsky R4 Hoverfly I flying at Farnborough
Eristalis tenax, drone-fly larvaeEristalis tenax is one of quite a large group of closely related hover-flies which have rat-tailed maggots, i.e. larvae with an elongated breathing tube at the end of their bodies. E
Leucozona lucorum L. hoverflyAdult female Hover fly (Diptera: family Syrphidae) feeding on clover flowers. Hoverflies resemble bees and wasps. Most adult hoverflies feed on nectar and pollen
Hoverfly in amberHoverfly preserved in Baltic amber. This specimen dates from the Upper Eocene
Syrphus ribesii, hoverflyThis species of hoverfly is often seen feeding on nectar within the Museums Wildlife Garden. Photograph taken by Derek Adams in April 2003
Volucella sp. hover-flyPhotograph of a hover-fly (Volucella sp.) on a flower