Irish damselfly

Irish damselfly or
crescent bluet
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Odonata
Family: Coenagrionidae
Genus: Coenagrion
Species: C. lunulatum
Binomial name
Coenagrion lunulatum
(Charpentier, 1840)

The Irish damselfly or crescent bluet (Coenagrion lunulatum) is a damselfly found in northern Europe and Asia to north-eastern China;.[1] It is common and widespread in northern Finland, scarce and local in the Netherlands and Ireland and rare elsewhere.[1] One of its English name comes from the fact that it is found in Ireland but not in Britain. The alternative name, crescent bluet, refers to the shape of the markings on segment two of the male and its scientific name.

Appearance

This species is similar to the azure damselfly (C. puella), the variable damselfly (C. pulchellum) and the common blue damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum) with which it coexists. However, both the female and male are darker and shorter-bodied in comparison with other blue damselflies.

The species can be identified using the following features:

In males the underside is bright green especially on the head and thorax (see side view)

Status in Ireland

C. lunulatum is uncommon in Ireland and is confined to the midlands and north.[2] It is listed as Vulnerable on the Red List of Irish dragonflies.[3] Adults have been recorded from the beginning of May (Co. Tyrone on 1 May 2011) to late July. It is found on sheltered mesotrophic lakes and large pools, fens and cutover bogs.

It was first recorded in Ireland in Sligo in 1981. The total number of sites known in Ireland at the beginning of 2013 was 94 in 16 counties. The range encompasses most of the northern half of Ireland. The northernmost site is in Co Donegal at Lough Napaste north of Milford and the southern limit is on the eastern edge of the Burren in Co Claree at Lough Skeardeen near Boston. The core of the range is in four counties – Fermanagh, Leitrim, Monaghan and Tyrone. These hold three-quarters of the recorded sites (71). The other counties have five or fewer known sites. One of the places it has been successfully recorded and photographed is Brackagh Moss, in Armagh but it is probably extinct there.[4]

Eutrophication is suggested as the most serious threat to the species.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.