
Forgot to mention earwigs. I'll kill them where ever I find them.
Why?
Madweasel Cream of the Crop ![]() 6,224 posts Likes: 61 Joined Jun 2006 Location: Fareham, UK More info | May 22, 2009 14:06 | #16 pturton wrote in post #7968782 ![]() Forgot to mention earwigs. I'll kill them where ever I find them. Why? Mark.
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CyberDyneSystems Admin (type T-2000) ![]() More info | May 22, 2009 14:13 | #17 Got to agree with Lester etc.. a Wildlife photographer should strive to leave the world we capture as undisturbed as humanly possible. GEAR LIST
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drh681 Member ![]() 157 posts Joined Feb 2009 Location: Freeway close to all Southern California More info | Yes: ![]()
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gjl711 "spouting off stupid things" ![]() 57,291 posts Likes: 3744 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Deep in the heart of Texas More info | May 23, 2009 19:00 | #19 Is the second one sleeping? Not sure why, but call me JJ.
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rjlittlefield Mostly Lurking 19 posts Joined Mar 2007 More info | Hello! I'm new to your community here at P.O.T.N. But I wrote several of the postings that Namerifrats references at photomacrography.net. Perhaps I can help put those in context.
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macro junkie Cream of the Crop ![]() 6,709 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jul 2007 Location: Somerset - UK More info | i never shoot dead ones..i have mayby 2 times in the hole time i been doing macro(2 years) Uk prayingmantis forum - http://www.dragonscrest.co.uk/forums/index.php
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Aug 24, 2009 18:47 | #22 rjlittlefield wrote in post #7977854 ![]() Hello! I'm new to your community here at P.O.T.N. But I wrote several of the postings that Namerifrats references at photomacrography.net. Perhaps I can help put those in context. First, it's important to recognize that not all photographers of insects are "wildlife photographers". At least five of the people I work with are biologists who are using high magnification stacking as a way to produce high quality reference illustrations. One of them is working on identification keys for tabanid flies of eastern Canada, another on land snails of New Zealand, and so on. Trying to use the ethics of one group in the other group's work, either way, would produce some pretty strange effects. Second, I think it's interesting to notice that the whole issue is not so much one of rational ethics as it is of perfectly valid emotional reaction. If rational ethics were all that's involved, it would be difficult to make a case for being concerned about the one insect in front of the camera, and not the tens of insects on the windshield of my car, or the thousands that got killed or displaced the last time I mowed the lawn, or the millions that got either pesticided or biologically excluded to grow the grain and vegetables in my vegan sandwich. (We won't even think about chicken salad.) On the other hand, I completely agree that there seems to be something rather perverse about killing an insect just to make a pretty picture of it. Imagine a character in a movie saying something like "I loved this thing so much that I killed it and brought it home so I could keep it with me always and always." I don't know about you, but I think I would take that line as suggesting a character who's a bit deranged if not actually dangerous. So there's the conflict that I confront. No matter how reviled a bug might be in normal context, if I make an attractive photograph of it, it becomes an object of attraction, and then I feel sympathy and sorrow for it. This presents some very interesting situations. I am obligated by local law to kill the fruit flies that would otherwise make maggots in my backyard cherries. No problem, there are sprays to do that job, and everyone around appreciates the effort. (There are huge economic penalties if even a single maggot turns up in a commercial harvest. Besides, they spoil the cherries.) But if I kill one of the flies carefully and personally, and make even a decent clinical photograph of it (http://www.photomacrography.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=5134 ![]() I think this is a fascinating effect, in large part because I feel it too. So what to do, what to do? One approach I use is to keep a lookout for "found specimens" -- bugs that turn up dead but still fresh enough to photograph. The spiderwebs in my windows are handy for this. It seems acceptable to salvage a freshly killed lacewing whose head is still intact. The spider, of course, ends up short on his next meal, but it's the lacewing and not the spider who gets the sympathy in this case. When I photograph the spider, it's the other way around. Complicated, eh? And fascinating, at least to me. Something to ponder, perhaps, the next time I'm eating lunch on the lawn thinking about photography. --Rik Hey Rik nice to see you here! I'm Cyclops on t'other forum. I personally would never kill something to photograph it. 30D | Canon IXUS 265HS | Samsung Galaxy S3 mini
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mikerault Goldmember ![]() 1,725 posts Likes: 1 Joined Feb 2007 Location: Alpharetta, Ga More info | Aug 24, 2009 21:14 | #23 Oh my, what would Mr. Audubon say? Oh, that's right, he killed everything before painting and sketching it.... Mike Ault
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wickerprints "Shooting blanks" ![]() 864 posts Joined Jul 2009 More info | Aug 24, 2009 21:28 | #24 Cordyceps fungus -- watch this fascinating video. 5DmkII :: EF 24-105/4L IS :: EF 85/1.8 :: EF 70-200/2.8L IS :: EF 100/2.8L IS macro (coming soon!)
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gjl711 "spouting off stupid things" ![]() 57,291 posts Likes: 3744 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Deep in the heart of Texas More info | Aug 24, 2009 21:34 | #25 wickerprints wrote in post #8517571 ![]() Cordyceps fungus -- watch this fascinating video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XuKjBIBBAL8 ![]() WOW, some fantastic photography. Not sure why, but call me JJ.
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reneethomas Demoted and banished by the TF ![]() 3,051 posts Likes: 4 Joined Jul 2007 Location: In the land of Misfits NM More info | Aug 25, 2009 06:36 | #26 The only time I have photographed a dead bug was when one accidentally got in the house and died. The only reason I would photograph it dead is to get an id to help the boys and I learn more about our environment. I always find it sad when I find these dead critters and I cannot imagine people killing them just to photograph them. Racquel is my real name
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macro junkie Cream of the Crop ![]() 6,709 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jul 2007 Location: Somerset - UK More info | i catch them..trap em in a tub or 1ft x1ft netting..i then leave it out side and shoot it in the morning around 5 or 6 am..its how i got this series of shots.when there cold they dont fly off..i only do this if im after a insect and i cant get the shots im after..its sort of a last resort Uk prayingmantis forum - http://www.dragonscrest.co.uk/forums/index.php
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Nope. I never kill bugs. I have been known to give them some very harsh warnings though.
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factorgrimm Mostly Lurking 18 posts Joined Apr 2009 More info | Sep 10, 2009 18:40 | #29 Personally, I think it is completely ridiculous to waste angst over the notion of killing an insect. People swat flies and mosquitos like there's no tomorrow, but they are going to get upset over "pretty" insects? Please.
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LynC Senior Member 312 posts Joined Oct 2009 Location: Albuquerque,NM More info | Oct 26, 2009 23:12 | #30 I guess I fall in between the extremes on this subject. If it is a mosquito, fly, poisonous spider or roach invading my home they will be DOA. Much to my wife’s dismay I catch any harmless spiders and put them outside before she sprays half a can of insecticide on it. Personally I can't imagine taking pictures of a dead insect unless there was a special reason and I certainly will not kill a beneficial one for sure. The results just don't look "natural" from what I have seen.
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