centuryplant: A Halloween Pennant dragonfly (Default)
centuryplant ([personal profile] centuryplant) wrote2012-11-29 07:33 pm

Orange Bluets

Orange Bluet damselflies (Enallagma signatum) mating near the swimming beach at Lake Louise State Park in Minnesota.

Most Bluet damselflies are blue and black and hard to tell apart -- in some cases it takes a microscope. Orange Bluets start out with the same color scheme, but turn a beautiful bright orange at maturity. Females sometimes remain blue, but more often become green or yellow; the one in this mating wheel is in mid-transition.

An Orange Bluet damselfly (Enallagma signatum) resting on the beach at Kinnickinnic State Park in Wisconsin.

holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2012-12-02 04:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Many odes are a little more cooperative for photography when mating! Except darners, argh.
holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2012-12-02 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I have no problem finding them on the wing, but most don't seem to stop at all except (sometimes) for mating, usually somewhere really inaccessible, like the top of a tree on the other side of a body of water, or ovipositing, usually somewhere inaccessible without waders (and some of the places I go really don't want people wading because they're worried about zebra mussel spread). Every now and then they'll hover nearby, just long enough to taunt me with the possibility of a flight shot, but not long enough for me to focus. They especially like to do this when I don't have a camera.

The one orange bluet pair I saw last fall, it was fairly late in the day (and season).