TOTAL PAGEVIEWS

TRANSLATE

Monday 28 June 2021

28-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - BLUE ROCK THRUSH (FEMALE) (Monticola solitarius)









 

28-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - WHITE WAGTAIL (Motacilla alba)





 

28-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - MOORISH GECKO (Tarentola mauritanica)



 

28-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - MEDITERRANEAN PALE GLOW-WORM (Nyctophila reichii)




 

28-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - BAND WINGED GRASSHOPPER (Genus Sphingonotus)


Sunday 27 June 2021

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - LITTLE RINGED PLOVER (JUVENILE) (Charadrius dubius)





27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - BARN SWALLOW (Hirundo rustica)




 

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - EPAULET SKIMMER DRAGONFLY (Orthetrum chrysostigma)




 

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - WHITE WAGTAIL (JUVENILE)





 

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - EUROPEAN BEE-EATER (Merops apiaster)




 

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - LITTLE OWL (Athene noctua)







 

27-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - WAVE MOTH (Idaea mediaria)


27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - WHITE FEATHERLEG DAMSELFLY (Platycnemis latipes)



 

27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - SOUTHERN BROWN ARGUS BUTTERFLY






27-6-2021 MONTAVERNER, VALENCIA - SMALL COPPER BUTTERFLY (Lycaena phlaeas)



 

Thursday 24 June 2021

24-6-2021 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - INDIAN FIG OPUNTIA (Opuntia ficus-indica)


Opuntia ficus-indica, the Indian fig opuntia, fig opuntia, or prickly pear, is a species of cactus that has long been a domesticated crop plant grown in agricultural economies throughout arid and semiarid parts of the world. O. ficus-indica is the most widespread and most commercially important cactus. It is grown primarily as a fruit crop, and also for the vegetable nopales and other uses. Cacti are good crops for dry areas because they efficiently convert water into biomass. O. ficus-indica, as the most widespread of the long-domesticated cactuses, is as economically important as maize and blue agave in Mexico. Opuntia species hybridize easily, but the wild origin of O. ficus-indica is likely to have been in central Mexico, where its closest genetic relatives are found.