[Odonata-l] effects of rain on Ode numbers
julierudnick@att.net
julierudnick at att.net
Wed Oct 10 09:46:50 PDT 2007
Hi Y'all..
I somehow got on this web-site mailing list and although I am enamored with dragonflies, I do not wish to continue to be on this list. Can you please remove me. Thanks to you all and have a blessed day!
--
-------------- Original message from khmo at att.net (John and Sue Gregoire <khmo at att.net>): --------------
This is a fascinating subject. My 2 cents:
In 2006 we had a rather large number of Celthemis elisa emerge from one of our ponds. It was a very rainy year, so my field notes are interesting. During a 2 day period of heavy rain, both day and night, hundreds emerged each day. They made their maiden flight into the Goldenrods around the pond OK but probably ran into problems with wet wings sticking to wet vegetation and starved to death. That species emergence was much lower this year.
As to death: how can you tell when a dragonfly is actually dead? We once placed a headless Anax on our bench to see what would happen. His wings fluttered AND he continued to defecate for three days. Surely, without a head, he was "dead", but the autonomic reflexes were still activated.
Sue G.
--
John & Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration
Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett, NY 14818-9626
"Conserve & Create HABITAT"
http://home.att.net/~kestrelhaven/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailweb.ups.edu/pipermail/odonata-l/attachments/20071010/e9d4184c/attachment.html
More information about the Odonata-l
mailing list