Translate


-
English
-
Kiswahili
-
Afrikaans
-
هَوُسَ
-
Asụsụ Igbo
-
اَف صَومالي˜
-
Yorùbá
-
isiZulu
-
Français
-
Dansk
-
Svenska
-
Norsk
-
Íslenska
-
Suo̯men
-
Català
-
Cymraeg
-
Gaeilge
-
Deutsch
-
Galego
-
Nederlands
-
Euskara
-
Italiano
-
Español
-
Português
-
босански
-
Українська
-
Slovenski
-
Slovenčina
-
Srpski
-
Русский
-
Română
-
Polski
-
Lietuvių
-
Latviešu
-
Magyar
-
Eesti
-
Český
-
Hrvatski
-
Беларускія
-
Български
-
Shqip
-
Ελληνικά
-
Македонски
-
ქართული
-
বাংলা
-
ગુજરાતી
-
ພາສາລາວ
-
தமிழ்
-
Sinugbuanon
-
Монгол хэл
-
ភាសាខ្មែរ
-
Basa Jawa
-
मराठी
-
آذری
-
Հայերեն
-
اردو
-
Türkçe
-
Tiếng Việt
-
ภาษาไทย
-
فارسی
-
Bahasa Malaysia
-
조선말
-
日本語
-
Bahasa Indonesia
-
मानक हिन्दी
-
עברית
-
Filipino
-
漢字
-
汉字
-
العربية
-
Kannaḍa
-
తెలుగు
-
Hmong
-
नेपाली भाषा
Bacterial/algal mat on shore at Ballyronan
Extensive nature of the contamination.
Dense fungal/bacterial mat.
The scarlet dragonfly (Crocothemis erythraea) is a rare visitor to southern Britain and is a delight to see. The males are red while the females are yellow. The picture below was taken with an iPhone by Michael Mullan at La Mata nature park in Spain.
Spanish squirrel photographed at La Mata nature park in Spain by Michael Mullan with an iPhone. There are lots of squirrels here, brown as opposed to the red colour of the British and Irish native squirrels.