Cardinal Meadowhawk Dragonfly [Nature on the Farmstead #3]

Nature on the Farmstead posts will be educational and informative about the nature that happens on my farmstead. Look forward to posts about wild animals, birds, wildflowers and plants, insects, and more!

Cardinal Meadowhawk

Cardinal Meadowhawk (Sympetrum illotum)

For some reason, dragonflies get a kick out of landing on my car's antennae. This happens kind of often. However, this guy really stuck out to me because I'VE NEVER SEEN A BRIGHT ASS RED DRAGONFLY BEFORE. I was in awe! And a little freaked out, to tell you the truth! I was on my way out the door to run some errands hand had to ask this dude for a photoshoot. He was surprisingly willing, patient, and still. Not camera-shy one bit! Haha

Description

And yes, this is in fact a male! The females are a pretty dull brown color, I guess I read that they're sometimes red, but not often. What you can't really see very well in these images are the two white spots that he has on either side of his thorax. I really had to look and realize that no, those weren't reflections. Haha. The adults are about one a half to one and five eighths inches long. I guess that's pretty large for the Sympetrum type.

Range & Habitat

These Cardinal Meadowhawks are found from Southern British Columbia, northwestern Idaho, and all the way down the west side of North America down into Mexico, Chile and Argentina! Quite the area to inhabit!

They are typically found near bodies of water, lakes, slow moving rivers and streams, ponds, etc. Funny enough, the closest body of water is like, 5 miles away, which is a large reservoir. I guess the crooked river is somewhere around here, but, not on my property!

Food & Life Cycle

After a male and female mate, the female will lay 12-300 eggs, each about the size of a period, directly into a point or other still body of water.

After about two weeks, the babies hatch and they are now called naiads or nymphs. They live underwater, within the debris at the bottom of the pond or lake for about a year. The naiads eat a variety of aquatic insects, including the larvae from mosquitos, aquatic flies, and mayflies. Sometimes they will even eat very tiny fish and tadpoles! Instead of actively seeking out prey, the young naiads will sit and await like ninjas for their food to come to them. This tactic keeps them from being dinner themselves!

After that initial year, the young naiads will be ready to transform into the dragonfly you see above. They typically crawl out of the body of water onto some sort of reed or plant sticking out from the water. Much like how a butterfly emerges from a cocoon, the naiad cracks open it's exoskeleton and crawls out as their dragonfly self (check out some great images here of their emergence!).

The image on the right is a Cardinal Meadowhawk naiad/nymph. Nymphs, or naiads are only about three quarters of an inch long!

As an adult, the dragonfly will eat almost any soft-bodied flying insect such as mosquitoes, flies, small moths, mayflies, and flying ants or termites.

Uhm, yes!! Whoo hoo, something we KNOW eats mosquitoes?

How can I encourage dragonflies to visit my yard?

Sometimes dragonflies will even visit small bodies of water like a back yard pond.

Ideally, a garden pond varies in depth. Water plants, rooted in deeper water, provide a good refuge for nymphs, as well as habitat for prey. Emergent plants, such as rushes (Juncus) and sedges (Carex), rise above shallow water and provide convenient perching places, and are important for nymphs leaving the water to molt into the final, adult stage. [...]
A few flat rocks near the pond’s edge provide basking spots for dragonflies and access to the water for other beneficial insects and wildlife. (Pacific Horticulture).

More great tips on attracting them to your yard by the National Wildlife Federation!

Last pic



Info Sources


As always @farmstead here blogging from FarmsteadSmith!

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Photos by me using my iPhone 6s, unless stated otherwise!


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