Australian Dragonflies

£29.95

Australian Dragonflies

A Guide to the Identification, Distributions and Habitats of Australian Odonata

Zoology: invertebrates

Authors: J. A. L. Watson, G Theischinger, H M. Abbey

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Language: English

Published by: CSIRO PUBLISHING

Published on: 1st January 1991

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 8 Mb

ISBN: 9780643102392


Dragonflies are conspicuous insects

Many are large; they fly strongly; most are brightly coloured. As a result, they have been collected extensively. Their larvae are less familiar. ''Mud-eyes'', as some are called, are drab, and almost all live in freshwaters, out of sight. They are, perhaps, best known as bait for freshwater fish. The dragonflies constitute a very distinct order of insects, the Odonata.

In Australia, two suborders are represented: damselflies (Zygoptera), generally very slender insects, the fore- and hindwings similar in shape and venation and commonly held closed above the body at rest (Figs 46-63), the larvae with external gills on the end of the abdomen (Figs 4A-C, E); and dragonflies proper (Anisoptera), stouter, stronger-flying insects, the fore- and hindwings more or less dissimilar in shape and venation and commonly held spread at rest (Figs 64-101), the larvae with internal, rectal gills (see Chapter 2). Living representatives of the third suborder (Anisozygoptera) are confined to Japan and the Himalayas. The term ''dragonfly'' is commonly applied to the entire order.

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