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Dragonflies evolved 300 million years ago, which is before dinosaurs and birds. Hatching from an egg in the water, a dragonfly feasts on tadpoles, fish, mosquitoes and even other larvae. Eventually, it climbs out of the liquid home and cracks open its exoskeleton, stretching out its abdomen that’s been packed away. Finally, the wings dry and harden as they spread out.
A pair of compound eyes with 30,000 facets take up a dragonfly’s head. Except for the one blind spot directly behind them, these eyes give the dragonfly 360-degree vision.
Flying up, down, sideways, backwards – dragonflies do it all! They even hover. They accomplish this with two sets of wings that can be controlled independently, allowing them to change the angle of their wings as they fly. On top of that, some species can reach flying speeds of 18 mph (29 kph).
The globe skimmer or wandering glider – a dragonfly with the longest migration of all insects – travels 11,000 miles (17,702 kilometers) across oceans. Throughout this journey, this little 1.5 inch dragonfly can go 4,400 miles (7,081 kilometers) without landing!
Dragonflies maintain around a 95% success rate while hunting. Their success comes from snatching prey out of the air with their feet and ripping it apart with serrated mandibles — a strong jaw with points sort of like teeth. But no need to worry, dragonflies would only bite humans out of defense and their bite isn’t likely to break skin!
In their adult stage, dragonflies eat irritating insects like biting flies and mosquitos. In fact, one dragonfly can chow down on 30 to hundreds of mosquitoes each day. To repay the dragonfly, let’s protect their habitats like fields, forests, rivers and lakes! It would be lovely if this multitalented insect and sign of good luck could hang around a while longer.
Lori Godfrey
Nov 19, 2020
Thanks! For sharing…I had a Dragon Fly by my front door one day. My youngest son. Was coming home from prison. I immediately went inside and looked up Native American meaning of Dragon Fly’s.
Judy Richards
Nov 12, 2020
So very interesting! Did not know they begin their lives under water. Cool
John patrick
Nov 08, 2020
And when they mate they make a heart shape. ❤️
Jean Wallace
Nov 08, 2020
great little post, loved learnin these interesting facts about an insect I love!