What kind of dragonflies are these?

LongIslandPiney

Explorer
Jan 11, 2006
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0
There sure are alot of dragonflies out, I saw 3 different types when I was out near the woods this week

normal_dragon2.jpg


normal_dragon3.jpg

normal_dragon1.jpg
 

bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
14,677
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Pines; Bamber area
That last shot is a really nice photo. I have a special fondness for dragon flies. They are big mosquito killers and neat fliers. When I was on vacation in Alaska, we drove down a road in the wilderness, and for nearly 60 miles we were never out of sight of dragonflies, skimming above the road and eating mosquitoes.
 

Boyd

Administrator
Staff member
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Jul 31, 2004
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Ben's Branch, Stephen Creek
Those really are great pix! I'm all for anything which eats mosquitoes. The skeeters are really bad around here right now because of the recent heavy rain. I have a lot of bright blue dragonflies down by the creek at my place; very colorful. Thanks for posting those photos.
 

bobpbx

Piney
Staff member
Oct 25, 2002
14,677
4,851
Pines; Bamber area
More neat info:

"Dragonflies are so aeronautically adept that they put nearly all other insects to shame. Only some (not all) true flies (Diptera) can match their speed and agility. Watching a highly animated dragonfly on a hot day can exhaust a person's eyes and neck. Trying to spot one through binoculars and then follow it is next to impossible. But watch a dragonfly hovering, and you'll see its wings in action. Talk about flight control. In an instant they can change direction or come to a stop and hover in mid air. And dragonflies have been clocked at over 30 miles per hour. No wonder dragonflies, when they are active, are almost impossible to capture."

Source: http://www.ulsterpublishing.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=article&articleID=351158
 

Teegate

Administrator
Site Administrator
Sep 17, 2002
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I agree on the last photo. That is a perfect shot! Thanks for posting them.

Guy
 

Furball1

Explorer
Dec 11, 2005
378
1
Florida
Air-dragons

:D I love dragonflies, like y'all, am amazed at their--well, their "life", so to speak---they are just so ALIVE--akin to watching swallows. When my friend Tom and I would go fishing, usually in the pines--Chatsworth Lake, Oswego Lake, wherever, we were almost always treated to their aerial acrobatics--like watching a P-51 Mustang take out a Messerschmidt---skeeters don't have a chance. Around midday, when fishing would slow down, we'd sit there in the canoe and watch them land on the ends of our fishing rods to take breaks, almost in imitation of our lull. All different colors and shapes, sometimes they'd bang into each other in mid-air and tussle and then take off in opposite directions. Always amusing and full of life. Just love 'em.:D
 

RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,058
3,328
Pestletown, N.J.
Brings back one of the nearly useless tidbits of information that I learned in entomolgy at Rutgers circa 1979.
Dragonflies are in the family Isoptera. This means wings of equal length. Iso meaning equal and ptera, Latin for wing. (ie. pteradactyl )
Regular flies are in the diptera family meaning two wings.
Dragonflies predate regular flies because thay do not have the ability to fold their wings as flies can.
Actually this trggers another fonder memory.
There is a Simpsons episode where Homer gets a job running a monorail.
In training they tell him: Mono means one, rail means rail. :rofl:
Scott
 

Teegate

Administrator
Site Administrator
Sep 17, 2002
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You sound like my youngest daughter. She can relate anything to a Simpsons episode. Sometimes what she says is quite comical and we are ROFL. Most times in public :)

Guy
 
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