Libellula

Libellula is a genus of dragonflies, commonly called skimmers, in the family Libellulidae, distributed throughout the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere. Most species are found in the United States, where they are the best-known large dragonflies, often seen flying over freshwater ponds in summer. Many have showy wing patterns.[1]

Skimmers
Broad-bodied Chaser
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Libellula

Species

See text

Overview

The taxa Ladona (corporals) and Plathemis (whitetails) have been considered as synonyms of Libellula, subgenera, or separate genera by different authorities. Recent phylogenetic analysis has supported their status as either subgenera or full genera.[2][3]

Species

Slaty Skimmer, Libellula incesta
Twelve-spotted Skimmer, Libellula pulchella

Except as otherwise noted, species are native to North America.[4]

  • Libellula angelina Selys, 1883 (North China, Japan)
  • Libellula auripennis Burmeister, 1839 – golden-winged skimmer (North and Central America)
  • Libellula axilena Westwood, 1837 – bar-winged skimmer
  • Libellula brodieri[5]
  • Libellula calypso[5]
  • Libellula comanche Calvert, 1907 – Comanche skimmer
  • Libellula composita Hagen, 1873 – bleached skimmer
  • Libellula croceipennis Selys, 1869 – neon skimmer (North and Central America)
  • Libellula cyanea Fabricius, 1775 – spangled skimmer
  • Libellula depressa Linnaeus, 1758 – broad-bodied chaser (Europe, West Asia). Sometimes included in the genus Ladona.
  • Libellula doris[5]
  • Libellula eusebioi[5]
  • Libellula flavida Rambur, 1842 – yellow-sided skimmer
  • Libellula foliata Kirby, 1889 (Mexico)
  • Libellula forensis Hagen, 1861 – eight-spotted skimmer
  • Libellula fulva Müller, 1764 – scarce chaser
  • Libellula gaigei Gloyd, 1938 (Central America)
  • Libellula herculea Karsch, 1889 (Central and South America)
  • Libellula incesta Hagen, 1861 – slaty skimmer
  • Libellula jesseana Williamson, 1922 – purple skimmer
  • Libellula kieseli[5]
  • Libellula luctuosa Burmeister, 1839 – widow skimmer
  • Libellula mariae Garrison, 1992 (Central America)
  • Libellula martini[5]
  • Libellula melli Schmidt, 1948 (China)
  • Libellula melobasis
  • Libellula needhami Westfall, 1943 – Needham's skimmer
  • Libellula nodisticta Hagen, 1861 – hoary skimmer
  • Libellula pannewitziana[5]
  • Libellula perse[5]
  • Libellula pontica Selys, 1887 – red chaser (Armenia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kyrgyzstan, Syria, Turkey)
  • Libellula pulchella Drury, 1773 – twelve-spotted skimmer
  • Libellula quadrimaculata Linnaeus, 1758 – four-spotted skimmer or four-spotted chaser (Europe and North America)
  • Libellula saturata Uhler, 1857 – flame skimmer
  • Libellula semifasciata Burmeister, 1839 – painted skimmer
  • Libellula sieboldiana[5]
  • Libellula thetis[5]
  • Libellula thoe[5]
  • Libellula ukrainensis[5]
  • Libellula vibrans Fabricius, 1793 – great blue skimmer

Ladona

Plathemis

  • Plathemis lydia (Drury, 1770) – common whitetail or long-tailed skimmer
  • Plathemis subornata (Hagen, 1861) – desert whitetail
gollark: This was done, although it's considered an emergency backup backup only as it is probably unreliable due to impact damage.
gollark: Bee you. Deploying oneiroapiosomnohypnoforms.
gollark: It's pretty well-shielded, there are just issues with the communication links and shipping hardware up right now.
gollark: osmarks.tk will experience *critical* data loss, as our lunar backup site is not entirely functional yet.
gollark: Which will of course lead onto further issues with trout conservation.

References

  1. Needham, James G.; Minter J. Westfall Jr; Michael L. May (2000). Dragonflies of North America (rev. ed.). Gainesville, FL: Scientific Publishers. pp. 700–702. ISBN 0-945417-94-2.
  2. Artiss T, Schultz TR, Polhemus DA, Simon C (2001). "Molecular phylogenetic analysis of the dragonfly genera Libellula, Ladona, and Plathemis (Odonata: Libellulidae) based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I and 16S rRNA sequence data". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 18 (3): 348–61. doi:10.1006/mpev.2000.0867. PMID 11277629.
  3. Kambhampati, Srinivas; Charlton, Ralph E. (1999). "Phylogenetic relationship among Libellula, Ladona and Plathemis (Odonata: Libellulidae) based on DNA sequence of mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene". Systematic Entomology. 24 (1): 37–49. doi:10.1046/j.1365-3113.1999.00066.x.
  4. Libellula, funet.fi
  5. The Paleobiology Database

Data related to Libellula at Wikispecies


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.