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Dragonflies
 


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Odonota: Dragonflies and Damsles

There are only about twenty common and widespread species and most of them (adult males) are easy to identity.

Beyond identification, Odes are fun to watch. While butterflies (Lepidoptera) are pretty, they don’t do anything. They just blow around and be pretty. Dragonflies are hyperactive foragers and propagators and, when active, are always looking for food and sex. It is incredible to watch them hunt and eat, see them roll through the air in the "wheel position" and see the females spew clouds of eggs in water or on vegetation.

So here are 12 species. Print the images and you will have your own field guide for the next year, and dazzle your friends with your Odonata knowledge.
 


Twelve-spotted Skimmer - Libellula pulchella - male

Eight-spotted Skimmer - Libellula forensis - male

Whitetail Skimmer - Libellula lydia - male

Whitetail Skimmer - Libellula lydia - female

Widow Skimmer - Libellula luctuosa - male

Widow Skimmer – Libellula luctuosa - female

Western Pondhawk – Erythemis collocata – male: note green face

Western Pondhawk – Erythemis collacata – female

Blue Dasher – Pachydiplax longipennis – male: note white face

Black Saddlebags – Tramea lacerata – male

Grappletail – Octogomphus specularis – male

Pacific Spiketail – Cordulegaster dorsalis – male

Variegated Meadowhawk – Sympetrum corruptum - male

Striped Meadowhawk – Sympetrum pallipes – male

California Darner – Aeshna californica

The Flame Skimmer (Libellula saturata)
The skimmer is slightly larger and hunkier with a bright orangey-red wide abdomen, thorax and head. The leading edge and the basal-half of all four wings are orange. 

Cardinal Meadowhawk (Sympetrum illotum)
The meadowhawk is smaller and finer with a scarlet-red narrow abdomen, orangey thorax and head, and red eyes. Only the leading edge of each wing is reddish, leaving most of the flying surface veined-transparency. 
Lord of June (Anax junius)
Here is a lone male.


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