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Calico Pennant Dragonfly - Celithemis elisa |
![]() Young Male Calico Pennant Both genders start with yellow markings; the males transition to red as they mature. |
Dragonflies have excellent eyesight. Their compound eyes have up to 30,000 facets, each of which is a separate light-sensing organ or ommatidium, arranged to give nearly a 360° field of vision, important for taking prey on the wing, as has done the female shown above. Odonates are completely harmless - they do not sting or bite. Indeed, they are beneficial in the same respect spiders and other predators are beneficial - they keep the burgeoning insect population in check. Many of these species prey on each other; I often see dragonflies with damsels in their clutches. Dragonflies are among the most ancient of living creatures. Fossil records, clearly recognizable as the ancestors of our present day odonates, go back to Carboniferous times which means that the insects were flying more than 300 million years ago, predating dinosaurs by over 100 million years and birds by some 150 million.
Much larger dragonfly species existed in the distant past than occur on
earth today. The largest, found as a fossil, is an extinct Protodonata
named Meganeura monyi 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. The smallest modern species recorded is the libellulid
dragonfly, Nannophya pygmaea from east Asia with a wingspan of only 20
mm, or about ¾ of an inch. |

Female calico pennant
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Although a necessarily aquatic larva, I have found calico pennants abundant on high ground, hundreds of yards from the nearest water. Pennants of both genders perch on wildly waving grass stems in meadows, along roadsides and waste places, beside ponds and slow-moving water. They are very wary and difficult to approach from above or behind for some reason. Plan on spending lots of time chasing them for photographs: they rarely stay in one place with a large moving animal pursuing them. |
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![]() Mature male calico pennant has a bit of spider web on his wing
More Dragonflies: |
![]() Black Saddlebags (male) Tramea lacerata |
![]() Green Darner Male & Female Anax junius |
![]() Common Whitetail Libellula lydia |
![]() Widow Skimmer Libellula luctuosa |