- Sale!This is a native Cycloneda munda ladybug, not the Asian lady beetle which bites and is an invasive species. This harmless South Florida local eats aphids and is a natural insecticide control of harmful bugs. Found in Loxahatchee Florida which is an unincorporated area of Palm Beach County. Next to Broward County the city of Fort Lauderdale and North of Miami-Dade County and Miami Beach.
- Sale!This is a native Cycloneda munda ladybug, not the Asian lady beetle which bites and is an invasive species. This harmless South Florida local eats aphids and is a natural insecticide control of harmful bugs. Found in Loxahatchee Florida which is an unincorporated area of Palm Beach County. Next to Broward County the city of Fort Lauderdale and North of Miami-Dade County and Miami Beach.
- Sale!This is a native Cycloneda munda ladybug, not the Asian lady beetle which bites and is an invasive species. This harmless South Florida local eats aphids and is a natural insecticide control of harmful bugs. Found in Loxahatchee Florida which is an unincorporated area of Palm Beach County. Next to Broward County the city of Fort Lauderdale and North of Miami-Dade County and Miami Beach.
- Sale!This is a native Cycloneda munda ladybug, not the Asian lady beetle which bites and is an invasive species. This harmless South Florida local eats aphids and is a natural insecticide control of harmful bugs. Found in Loxahatchee Florida which is an unincorporated area of Palm Beach County. Next to Broward County the city of Fort Lauderdale and North of Miami-Dade County and Miami Beach.
- Sale!Fort Lauderdale, Florida / USA - 2/27/2019: Construction worker installing concrete red block pavers with safety cones, buckets for cement, grout and yellow electrical cables for power tools. Taken in downtown Fort Lauderdale off of Andrews Avenue.
- Sale!Juvenile Royal Tern is a sea bird in the Laridae family. Mistaken often for a seagull lives on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of the North and South America found on a South Florida Miami Beach.
- Sale!Broward County and all of South Florida including Miami-Dade County, Palm Beach County and Monroe County have a huge problem of these non-native and very invasive Green Iguanas. While they are typically only plant eating, (i.e. Hibiscus flowers) they have no natural predator to keep them in check within the food chain. Populating near waterways, they are breeding and becoming larger in numbers each year. Problems include damaged vegetation, residential home intrusion and damage to property with their high acidic faecal matter. Homeowners have been hiring pest removal services, reporting them to their local municipalities and have even gone to the extreme of killing these lizard on their own. The Green Iguana can grow quite large when unchecked by nature and an endless source of food, most local residents consider them pests and unwanted inhabitants to their yards and would like to see them gone. Invasive non-native Green Iguana lizard in the grass near brackish rainwater runoff and drainage canal between the Everglades and intercoastal in South Florida near Fort Lauderdale, Broward County. Actually found near the Arby’s off of University drive in Plantation between the road and the parking lot swale area.