Sponger Pictures, Images and Stock Photos
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Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Staghorn fern isolated on white background
Staghorn fern is growing in a pot
Timber fungus on a willow body
Timber fungus on a willow body
abstract detail photography showing a mushroom on bark
worm´s eye outdoor shot with mushrooms on the trunk of a dead tree
Natural closeup on the white trembling Merulius or jelly rot, Phlebia tremellosa
Timber fungus on a willow body
Large healthy staghorn ferm growing on eaves and gutter of tiled garden shed roof
Staghorn fern is growing in a pot
Staghorn fern is growing in a pot
Timber fungus on a willow body
Staghorn fern is growing in a pot
Staghorn fern in clay pot isolated on white background
Bee portrait macro on yellow flower
Giant staghorn fern growing in the wild on a live oak tree. Staghorns are propagated by spores that reside under the tips of their leaves.
eye to eye with a horrifying bug
Timber fungus on a willow body
photographed close-up adult striped Colorado beetle sitting on the edge of the green sheet of a potato growing on the field AGRICULTURAL. Summer season. Small depth of field
Items for bath soap sponge
Big varan sneaking into the house under the roof in Sri Lanka
Platycerium on the tree,staghorn fern
Crown Staghorn, Indian Staghorn Fern,Disk Staghorn, Platycerium coronarium (J.G. Koen.ex. Muell) Desv. on tree
Platycerium on the tree,staghorn fern
Tree mushrooms. Ganoderma lucidum, grows on the trunk of a dry tree in the forest on a sunny day on a blurred background of dry twigs and a stream. Tree fungus parasite.
Tree mushrooms. Ganoderma lucidum, grows on the trunk of a dry tree in the forest on a sunny day on a blurred background of dry twigs and a stream. Tree fungus parasite.
Crown Staghorn, Indian Staghorn Fern,Disk Staghorn, Platycerium coronarium (J.G. Koen.ex. Muell) Desv. on tree
Rare Platycerium superbum, Crown Staghorn, Indian Staghorn , Disk Staghorn, Big Staghorn fern on the tree
Foam sponger for washing dishes, black, assortment on a white background, horizontal, no people,. High quality photo
Foam sponger for washing dishes with cuppuccino flavor, on a white background, horizontal, no people,
A giant manta in Socorro Island
Foam sponger for washing dishes, black, assortment on a white background, horizontal, no people,. High quality photo
Foam sponger for washing dishes, black, assortment on a white background, horizontal, no people,. High quality photo
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Melampyrum arvense, commonly known as field cow-wheat, is an herbaceous flowering plant of the genus Melampyrum in the family Orobanchaceae.
Face to face with a fly
Staghorn fern isolated on white background
Trichaptum. The fungi genus trichaptum was defined (or circumscribed) in 1904 by the American mycologist William Alphonso Murrill. Classifying fungi is notoriously difficult and molecular studies were required to confirm that this genus belongs in the order Hymenochaetales. Once classified under the family Polyporaceae, trichaptum now falls under Incertae sedis. Many of the fungi in this genus live on rotting wood