Dragonfly

From New World Encyclopedia
Revision as of 02:26, 9 December 2007 by Rick Swarts (talk | contribs)


Dragonfly
Yellow-winged Darter
Yellow-winged Darter
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Odonata
Suborder: Epiprocta
Infraorder: Anisoptera
Selys, 1854
Families

Aeshnidae
Austropetaliidae
Cordulegastridae
Corduliidae
Gomphidae
Libellulidae
Macromiidae
Neopetaliidae
Petaluridae

A dragonfly is an insect belonging to the order Odonata, the suborder Epiprocta or, in the strict sense, the infraorder Anisoptera. It is 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 because their larvae, known as "nymphs," are aquatic. Dragonflies do not normally bite or sting humans (though they will bite in order to , if grasped by the abdomen); in fact, they are valued as a predator that helps control the populations of harmful insects, such as mosquitoes. It is because of this that dragonflies are sometimes called "mosquito hawks" in North America, along with crane flies (which, in fact, do not eat mosquitoes).

Life cycle

Dragonfly nymph

Female dragonflies lay eggs in or near water, often in or on floating or emergent plants. Some species when laying eggs will submerge themselves completely just to lay their eggs in a suitable place. Most of the life of the dragonfly is spent in the larval, (naiad, aka nymph) form, beneath the water surface, using internal gills to breathe, and using extendable jaws to catch other invertebrates or even vertebrates such as tadpoles and fish. The larvae of large dragonflies may live as long as five years, or two months to three years in smaller species. When the the larva is ready to metamorphose into an adult, it climbs up a reed or other emergent plant at night, and when it does the breathing pattern changes inside the larvae's body. Then the skin splits at a weak spot behind the head and the adult dragonfly crawls out of its old larval skin, waits for the sun to rise, pumps up its wings and flies off to feed on midges and flies. In the adult stage, larger species of dragonfly can live as long as four months.

Classification

Ancient dragonflies ("Anisozygoptera")

Conventionally, the Anisoptera were given suborder rank beside the ancient dragonflies ("Anisozygoptera," two 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). The artificial grouping Anisozygoptera is disbanded, its members being recognized as largely extinct offshoots at various stages of dragonfly evolution.

Wing structure of a dragonfly

The oldest known species of dragonfly is the 320 million year old Delitzschala bitterfeldensis. Another old genus is Namurotypus.

Dragonflies vs. damselflies

Damselflies (Suborder Zygoptera) are often confused with dragonflies, but the two insects are distinct: most damselflies at rest hold their wings together above the body or held slightly open above (such as in the family Lestidae), whereas dragonflies at rest hold their wings horizontally or occasionally slightly down and forward. Also, the hindwing of the dragonfly broadens near the base, caudal to the connecting point at the body, while the hindwing of the damselfly is essentially similar to the forewing. The eyes on a damselfly are separated; in most dragonflies the eyes touch, with notable exceptions to this being in the Petaluridae (Petaltails) and the Gomphidae (Clubtails). Both are members of the Odonata, making their life cycles similar.

Some common species of the Northern Hemisphere

Broad-bodied Chaser
Female Red-veined darter. Lisboa, Portugal
  • Emperor, Anax imperator
  • Keeled Skimmer, Orthetrum coerulescens
  • Black-tailed Skimmer, Orthetrum cancellatum
  • Common Whitetail, Libellula lydia
  • Migrant Hawker, Aeshna mixta
  • Azure Hawker, Aeshna caerulea
  • Southern Hawker, Aeshna cyanea
  • Norfolk Hawker, Aeshna isosceles
  • Common Hawker, Aeshna juncea
  • Red-veined Darter, Sympetrum fonscolombii
  • Common Darter, Sympetrum striolatum
  • Vagrant Darter, Sympetrum vulgatum
  • Yellow-winged Darter, Sympetrum flaveolum
  • Broad-bodied Chaser, Libellula depressa
  • Four-spotted Chaser, Libellula quadrimaculata
  • Scarce Chaser, Libellula fulva
  • Green Darner, Anax junius
  • Downy Emerald, Cordulia aenea
  • Blue-eyed Darner, Aeshna multicolor
  • Roseate Skimmer, Orthemis ferruginea
  • Widow Skimmer, Libellula luctuosa
  • Great Pondhawk, Erythemis vesiculosa
  • Comet Darner, Anax longipes
  • Banded Pennant, Celithemis fasciata

Some common species of the Southern Hemisphere

Kirby's Dropwing (Trithemis kirbyi) in Tsumeb, Namibia.
  • Glistening Demoiselle Phaon iridipennis
  • Dancing Jewel Platycypha caligata
  • Mountain Malachite Chlorolestes fasciatus
  • Common Spreadwing Lestes plagiatus
  • Common Threadtail Elattoneura glauca
  • Goldtail Allocnemis leucosticta
  • Swamp Bluet Africallagma glaucum
  • Pinhey's Whisp Agriocnemis pinheyi
  • Black-tailed Bluet Azuragrion nigridorsum
  • Common Citril Ceriagrion glabrum
  • Yellow-faced Sprite Pseudagrion citricola
  • Gambel's Sprite Pseudagrion gamblesi
  • Hagen's Sprite Pseudagrion hageni
  • Hamon's Sprite Pseudagrion hamoni
  • Kersten's Sprite Psuedagrion kersteni
  • Masai Sprite Pseudagrion massaicum
  • Salisbury Sprite Pseudagrion salisburyense
  • Natal Sprite Pseudagrion spernatum
  • Orange Emperor Anax speratus
  • Common Thorntail Ceratogomphus pictus
  • Yellowjack Notogomphus praetorius
  • Rock Hooktail Paragomphus cognatus
  • Acisoma Acisoma panorpoides and Acisoma trifidum
  • Banded Groundling Brachythemis leucosticta
  • Broad Scarlet Crocothemis erythraea
  • Little Scarlet Crocothemis sanguinolenta
  • Black Percher Diplacodes lefebvrii
  • Black-tailed Skimmer Nesciothemis farinosa
  • Two-striped Skimmer Orthetrum caffrum
  • Epaulet Skimmer Orthetrum chrysostigma
  • Julia Skimmer Orthetrum julia
  • St. Lucia Widow Palpopleura portia
  • Nomad Sympetrum fonscolombii
  • Red-veined Dropwing Trithemas arteriosa
  • Navy Dropwing Trithemis furva
  • Kirby's Dropwing Trithemis kirbyi
  • Jaunty Dropwing Trithemis stictica

Dragonflies in culture

In Europe, dragonflies have often been viewed as sinister. Some English vernacular names, such as "devil's needle" and "ear cutter," link them with evil or injury.[1] A Romanian folk tale says that the dragonfly was once a horse possessed by the devil, and Swedish folklore holds that the devil uses dragonflies to weigh people's souls.[2] Another Swedish legend holds that trolls use the dragonflies as spindles when weaving their clothes (hence the Swedish word for dragonfly trollslända, lit. "troll's spindle") as well as sending them to poke out the eyes of their enemies.[citation needed] The Norwegian name for dragonflies is "Øyenstikker," which literally means Eye Poker. They are often associated with snakes, as in the Welsh name gwas-y-neidr, "adder's servant".[1] The Southern United States term "snake doctor" refers to a folk belief that dragonflies follow snakes around and stitch them back together if they are injured.[3] The Lithuanian word "Laumžirgis" is a composite word meaning "the Lauma's horse," while in Dutch, Aeshna mixta is called "Paardenbijter" or "horse biter." In some South American countries, dragonflies are also called matacaballo (horse killer), or caballito del diablo (devil's horse), since they were perceived as harmful, some species being quite large for an insect.

In East Asia and among Native Americans, dragonflies have a far better reputation, one that can also be said to have positively influenced modern day views about dragonflies in most countries.

For some Native American tribes they represent swiftness and activity, and for the Navajo they symbolize pure water. Dragonflies are a common motif in Zuni pottery; stylized as a double-barred cross, they appear in Hopi rock art and on Pueblo necklaces.[4] It is said in some Native American beliefs that dragonflies are a symbol of renewal after a time of great hardship.

In Japan dragonflies are symbols of courage, strength, and happiness, and they often appear in art and literature, especially haiku. In ancient mythology, Japan was known as Akitsushima, which means "Land of the Dragonflies." The love for dragonflies is reflected by the fact that there are traditional names for almost all of the 200 species of dragonflies found in and around Japan.[5] Japanese children catch large dragonflies as a game, using a hair with a small pebble tied to each end, which they throw into the air. The dragonfly mistakes the pebbles for prey, gets tangled in the hair, and is dragged to the ground by the weight.[6]

They also have traditional uses as medicine in Japan and China. In some parts of the world they are a food source, eaten either as adults or larvae; in Indonesia, for example, they are caught on poles made sticky with birdlime, then fried in oil as a delicacy.[1]

Vietnamese people have a traditional way to forecast rain by seeing dragonflies: "Chuồn chuồn bay thấp thì mưa, bay cao thì nắng, bay vừa thì râm" (Dragonflies fly at low level, it is rainy; dragonflies fly at high level, it is sunny; dragonflies fly at medium level, it is shadowy).

Images of dragonflies were common in Art Nouveau, especially in jewelry designs.[7] They have also been used as a decorative motif on fabrics and home furnishings.[8]

Gallery

See also

  • Elliot Pinhey

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Phillip S. Corbet (1999). Dragonflies: Behavior and Ecology of Odonata. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 559-561. ISBN 0-8014-2592-1. 
  2. Forrest L. Mitchell and James L. Lasswell (2005). A Dazzle of Dragonflies. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 25-27. ISBN 1-585-44459-6. 
  3. Wayland D. Hand (1973). From Idea to Word: Folk Beliefs and Customs Underlying Folk Speech. American Speech 48 (1/2): 67-76. - Retrieved October 15, 2007.
  4. Mitchell and Lasswell, 20-26.
  5. Gilbert Waldbauer (1998). The Handy Bug Answer Book. Detroit: Visible Ink Press. ISBN 1-57859-049-3. 
  6. Mitchell and Lasswell, 38.
  7. Wendy Moonan, , "Dragonflies Shimmering as Jewelry", New York Times, August 13, 1999, pp. E2:38.
  8. Elizabeth Large, , "THE LATEST BUZZ; In the world of design, dragonflies are flying high", The Sun (Baltimore, MD), June 27, 1999, pp. 6N.

External links

All links retrieved October 15, 2007.

Commons
Wikimedia Commons has media related to::

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.