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Encyclopedia > Anisoptera


Dragonflies

Blue dragonfly
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Hexapoda
Order: Odonata
Suborder: Anisoptera
Families

Aeshnidae
Austropetaliidae
Cordulegastridae
Corduliidae
Gomphidae
Libellulidae
Neopetaliidae
Petaluridae

The dragonfly is an insect belonging to the Order Odonata, Suborder Anisoptera and characterized by large multifaceted eyes, two pairs of strong transparent wings, and an elongated body. Dragonflies typically eat mosquitoes, midges and other small insects like flies, bees, and butterflies. They are usually found around lakes, ponds, streams, and wetlands for the reason that their larvae (known as nymphs) are aquatic. Dragonflies do not bite or sting humans.[1] In fact, they are valued as a predator that helps control the populations of insects that do, such as mosquitoes.

Contents

General facts

The life cycle of the dragonfly, from egg to death of adult, is from six months to as much as six or seven years. Sometimes female dragonflies lay eggs in the small cleft between mud or moss. Most of their life time is spent in the larval (nymph) form, beneath the water surface, using gills to breathe, catching other invertebrates or even vertebrates such as tadpoles and fish. In the adult (flying) stage, larger species of dragonfly can live as long as four months. Dragonflies have very good eyesight due to their unique eye structure. Dragonflies have about 30,000 facets to their eyes, arranged to give them nearly a 360° field of vision.


Much larger dragonfly species existed in the distant past than occur on earth today. The largest, found as a fossil, is an extinct Protodonata from the Permian period with a wingspan of 70–75 cm (27.5–29.5 in). This compares to 19 cm (7.5 in) for the largest modern species of odonates, the Hawaiian endemic dragonfly, Anax strenuus, and the Central American giant damselfly, Megaloprepus coerulatus. The smallest modern species recorded is the libellulid dragonfly, Nannophya pygmaea from east Asia with a wing span of only 20 mm, or about 3/4 of an inch.

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Green Darner Dragonfly feeding on honeybee

The Common Green Darner dragonfly (Anax junius) is nicknamed "Darning Needle" because of its body shape. It is one of the biggest and fastest-flying dragonflies. It can reach a blazing speed of 53 miles (85 km) per hour.


Damselflies (Suborder Zygoptera) are often confused with dragonflies, but the two insects are distinct: damselflies at rest hold their wings together above the body, whereas dragonflies at rest hold them out, either horizontally or slightly down and forward. Also, the eyes on a damselfly are separated, while those of the dragonfly are nearly touching. Both are members of Odonata, and their life cycles are similar.

 

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Dragonflies have multifaceted compound eyes set close together

Some common species

Footnotes

1. Notable physicist Richard Feynman chased dragonflies around a pool once to prove to his friends that, while dragonflies evoke a particular kind of terror in some humans, they are in fact completely harmless.


Sources

Silsby, Jill. 2001. Dragonflies of the World. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. ISBN 1560989599


External links

Photos







  Results from FactBites:
 
Odonata - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (672 words)
Odonata is an order in the class Insecta, encompassing those insects commonly known as dragonflies (either when referring to the group as a whole, or for the species in the suborder Epiprocta in a general or the infraorder Anisoptera in a strict sense) and damselflies (for the species in the suborder Zygoptera).
It was long believed that the Anisoptera were a suborder and that there existed a third one, the Anisozygoptera (ancient dragonflies).
However, they were combined in the suborder Epiprocta (in which Anisoptera is an infraorder) after it was revealed that the Anisozygoptera are a paraphyletic group composed of mostly extinct offshoots of dragonfly evolution.
Dragonfly - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (635 words)
It is characterized by large multifaceted eyes, two pairs of strong transparent wings, and an elongated body.
Conventionally, the Anisoptera were given suborder rank besides the "ancient dragonflies" (Anisozygoptera, 2 living species and numerous fossil ones), but it has been determined recently that the Anisozygoptera form a paraphyletic assemblage of primitive relatives of the Anisoptera.
Thus, the Anisoptera are reduced to an infraorder, forming the new suborder Epiprocta (dragonflies in a general sense).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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