Green Darter. Photo by Barb Mayer. Midway Atoll.
Project SOAR and Friends of Fred have added DRAGONFLY
to our growing list of species.
The above photo was taken by Barb just as the adult Dragonfly
began unfolding its wings at the edge of quiet waters.
Google Green Darter and you will find many articles about these insects.
Team up with Friends of Fred and you will soon learn much more and,
hopefully get involved in the science and art of Dragonflies.
I spent a couple days presenting and attending the
National Art Educators Association convention this week.
On returning home, I realized I should have presented a talk
called INSPIRATION........
Dragonflies inspire for sure.........They are beautiful creatures.
Their wings seem so delicate and yet they carry these predators
as if made of Boeing aluminum and fitted to the body with rivets.
Some kids, when I ask about this beauty tell me God made them.......
To each his and her own beliefs........
As an ecologist, I am adding Dragonflies to SOAR
because they represent a critical link
in watershed ecology
AND
Their beauty helps kids create dazzling art,
ART THAT MAKES THEM THINK!!!!!!!
Art and Science go together in the world of children
like chocolate and peanut butter.....and honey, and nuts, and more
chocolate!
Dragonflies link with their relatives, the even more delicate Damselflies.
Dragon and Damselflies are aquatic, totally so for most of their lives.
They are somewhat unusual in that the juvenile form, known as NYMPHS,
lives far longer than the adult form and there is no intermediate stage between
EGG
and
NYMPH.
The NYMPHS are so kid friendly.
I take hundreds of kids out onto and into ponds, netting up big wads of gooey muck.
We haul the net onto the shore and take a look..........
At first there may be no sign of life.......nothing at all. Then, suddenly, as if added by
Steven Spielberg,
DRAGONFLY NYMPHS crawl out of the goo, greeted by screams of delight!
A Dragonfly Nymph might measure a couple inches and, equiped as it is with
HUGE AND POWERFUL JAWS,
The Nymph can and does feast on fish!
As a juvenile, the Dragonfly is an awesome predator, inspiring kids
with its curious shape, strong legs, and water lifestyle.
Follow this blog thread and we will share seining trips to
Buck Lake in Washington State with kids from Breidablik Elementary
and, later in the spring, with kids from Ohio and beyond.
Watch for the Nymphs this spring as they crawl out of the muck
at a pond near you........Watch as they become motionless, then crack open to reveal
a dazzling
GREEN DARNER!!!
Much Smaller Damsels are also predatory as juveniles, live in the same
basic wet habitats, and go through a similar metamorphosis......
To tell a Damsel adult from a Dragon adult?
Like butterflies and moths, the two generally have different wing resting positions.
Dragonflies hold their wings out when at rest.
Damselflies hold their wings together.
If you live in Hawaii,
Watch for endangered Damselflies and read more about them in:
HAWAIIAN INSECTS AND THEIR KIN
by
F.G. Howarth and W.P. Mull
and
Hawaiian Damselflies: An Identification Guide
by Dan Polhemus and Adam Asquith
Happy Dragon and Damselfly Watching!
1 comment:
Hi Ron!
I really like the way dragonfly wings sometimes look like they have a rainbow in them.
The website that accompanies my name below will take you to my dragonfly experience on Pihemanu/Midway Atoll.
Thanks for all your work with kids...and all of us; aloha!
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