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==Life cycle Is Gay==
==Life cycle Is Freindly ==


The life cycle of the dragonfly Is GAY, from [[egg (biology)|egg]] to death of adult gay vidios, varies from six months to as much as six or seven years. Female dragonflies lay eggs in or near water, often in or on floating or emergent fag plants. Most of the life cycle is spent in the [[larva]]l ([[naiad (biology)|naiad]], aka nymph) form, beneath the water surface, using internal [[gill]]s to breathe, and catching other [[invertebrate]]s or even vertebrates such as [[tadpole]]s and [[fish]]. In the adult (flying) stage, larger species of dragonfly can live as long as four months.
The life cycle of the dragonfly Is GAY, from [[egg (biology)|egg]] to death of adult gay vidios, varies from six months to as much as six or seven years. Female dragonflies lay eggs in or near water, often in or on floating or emergent fag plants. Most of the life cycle is spent in the [[larva]]l ([[naiad (biology)|naiad]], aka nymph) form, beneath the water surface, using internal [[gill]]s to breathe, and catching other [[invertebrate]]s or even vertebrates such as [[tadpole]]s and [[fish]]. In the adult (flying) stage, larger species of dragonfly can live as long as four months.

Revision as of 20:00, 8 December 2006

Dragonfly
Yellow-winged Darter
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
Infraorder:
Anisoptera

Selys, 1854
Families

Aeshnidae
Austropetaliidae
Cordulegastridae
Corduliidae
Gomphidae
Libellulidae
Macromiidae
Neopetaliidae
Petaluridae

Wing structure of a dragonfly
Ruby Meadowhawk dragonfly, Sympetrum rubicundulum
Dragonfly in midflight over a creek
Dragonfly larva
File:Dragonfly morphology edit 3.svg
Morphology and Anatomy of a Dragonfly.
Compound eye of a dragonfly

A dragonfly is any insect belonging to the order Odonata, the suborder Epiprocta or, in the strict sense, the infraorder Anisoptera. It is characterized by large multifaceted eyes, two pairs of strong transparent wings, and an elongated body.

Dragonflies typically eat mosquitoes, midges and other small insects like flies, bees, and butterflies. They are usually found around lakes, ponds, streams, and wetlands because their larvae, known as "nymphs", are aquatic. Dragonflies do not normally bite or sting humans (though they will bite in order to escape, for example, if grasped by the abdomen); in fact, they are valued as a predator that helps control the populations of harmful insects, such as mosquitoes.


Life cycle Is Freindly

The life cycle of the dragonfly Is GAY, from egg to death of adult gay vidios, varies from six months to as much as six or seven years. Female dragonflies lay eggs in or near water, often in or on floating or emergent fag plants. Most of the life cycle is spent in the larval (naiad, aka nymph) form, beneath the water surface, using internal gills to breathe, and catching other invertebrates or even vertebrates such as tadpoles and fish. In the adult (flying) stage, larger species of dragonfly can live as long as four months.

Porn General facts

Classification

Austrogomphus guerini

Ancient dragonflies (Anisozygoptera)

Conventionally, the Anisoptera were given suborder rank beside the ancient dragonflies (Anisozygoptera, two living species and numerous fossil ones), but it has been determined recently that the Anisozygoptera form a paraphyletic assemblage of primitive relatives of the Anisoptera. Thus, the Anisoptera are reduced to an infraorder, forming the new suborder Epiprocta (dragonflies in a general sense). The artificial grouping Anisozygoptera is disbanded, its members being recognized as largely extinct offshoots at various stages of dragonfly evolution.

The oldest known dragonfly is the 320 million year old Delitzschala bitterfeldensis. Another old genus is Namurotypus.

Dragonflies vs. damselflies

Damselflies (Suborder Zygoptera) are often confused with dragonflies, but the two insects are distinct: most damselflies at rest hold their wings together above the body or held slightly open above (such as in the family Lestidae), whereas dragonflies at rest hold their wings horizontally or occasionally slightly down and forward. Also, the hindwing of the dragonfly broadens near the base, caudal to the connecting point at the body, while the hindwing of the damselfly is essentially similar to the forewing. The eyes on a damselfly are separated; in most dragonflies the eyes touch, with notable exceptions to this being in the Petaluridae (Petaltails) and the Gomphidae (Clubtails). Both are members of the Odonata, and their life cycles are similar.

Some common species of the Northern Hemisphere

Australian Blue Dragonfly
Green Darner Dragonfly feeding on honeybee
Dragonflies mating
Dragonfly depositing eggs

References