I'm GREEN with envy
Green on plants is just the norm because of the whole Krebs cycle and photosynthesis thing, but when I see green in unexpected places like insects or plant parts like Palo Verde tree bark, lichens or even minerals and water, it becomes mesmerizing, soothing, and cooling. Metallic green, which is really metallic blue plus melanin pigment. Melanin pigment is the the most common pigment used in the animal kingdom, and different amounts result in the black and brown colors that abound in animals. So metallic green actually is common since animals tend to already have melanin. If green provides a great background with plants and insects, that is appealing too. Add iridescent green to insects and other animals like hummingbirds and I am in awe. So here is my list of green things I loved to look at.
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Arkansas Green Lint Cotton - Gossypium hirsutum -
Four-Spotted Cup Moth - Doratifera quadriguttata -
Polytrichum formosum -
Sibovia prodigiosa, Bellavista, Ecuador -
Gunnera insignis - leaf, Bellavista, Ecuador -
Trooping Crumble Cap, Bellavista, Ecuador -
Interspecies Love - Pseudeos fuscata female and Trichoglossus moluccanus male -
Phyllium Giganteum - Giant Walking Leaf -
Paris sp. -
Violet-tailed sylph, Quinde Luna, Ecuador -
Austrosciapus connexus ? -
Platycoelia sp., Bellavista, Ecuador -
Polygonia c-album -
Tailed Jay Butterfly, Graphium agamemnon "flying over the Zinnia flowers" -
Crowned woodnymph -2, Milpe Bird Sanctuary, Ecuador -
Sweet Chestnut - Castanea sativa -
Interrupted Fern - Osmunda claytoniana -
Pupa of Tawny Palmfly -
Nemoria adaluzae, Milpe Bird Sanctuary, Ecuador -
Crimson-rumped Toucanet -
Rock Isotome -
Caldwelliola tharma, Milpe Bird Sanctuary, Ecuador -
Synchlora decorata, Finca Heimatlos, Ecuador -
Amazon Milk Frog - frontal, Finca Heimatlos, Ecuador