16Jun

Common Baskettail

The common baskettail is a dragonfly of the Corduliidae family. The thorax is brown and hairy. Some specimens have a triangular spot at the base of the hindwing. Individuals are difficult to distinguish from the other species in this genus. Find Out More Here
16Jun

Stream Cruiser

This thinly-built, long-legged dragonfly of forest streams is one of the earliest species to appear each spring, just days after the Common Green Darner. Slender, brown, fast, and cruising over the water’s surface, Stream Cruisers are found in early April, long before dragonflies become a common sight. Find Out More Here
16Jun

Twin-spotted Spiketail

Cordulegaster maculata, also known as the twin-spotted spiketail, is a dragonfly of the family Cordulegastridae. Its body length varies in size from 2.5 to 3.0 inches. It was described by Edmond de Sélys Longchamps in 1854. Find Out More Here
16Jun

Northern Pygmy Clubtail

Lanthus is a genus of club-tailed dragonflies found in North America, commonly called pygmy clubtails. They are found in Japan and North America. The species are clear winged with black bodies and yellow markings   Find Out More Here
16Jun

Mustached Clubtail

The Mustached Clubtail (Gomphus adelphus) primarily occurs in the northeastern U.S. as well as southeast Canada, but it also ranges south along the Appalachians rarely as far south as North Carolina and Georgia.   Find Out More Here
16Jun

Variable Darner

The variable darner (Aeshna interrupta) is a dragonfly of the family Aeshnidae, native from Alaska through the Northwest Territories to Newfoundland, south to New Hampshire and Michigan in the eastern United States, and to the mountains of New Mexico, Arizona, and California in the west. It's named after the distinctive broken stripes on the sides [...]
16Jun

Eastern Forktail

Eastern forktail is a member of the damselfly family Coenagrionidae. The males are yellow-green with blue on the top of the eighth and ninth abdominal segments. The females may be orange, or less commonly yellow-green like the male.   Find Out More Here
16Jun

Fragile Forktail

Ischnura posita, the fragile forktail, is a species of damselfly in the genus Ischnura. It is 21 to 29 mm long. It is native to most all of eastern North America.[2] Find Out More Here
16Jun

Stream Bluet

The stream bluet (Enallagma exsulans) is a species of American bluet damselflies in the family Coenagrionidae. Its length is 29–37 mm. Many bluet species prefer ponds and lakes; the stream bluet as its name implies is most at home along moving waters. It can be found along small to medium-sized rivers. It is occasionally found at [...]
16Jun

Northern Bluet

The northern bluet is a small damselfly with a length of 1 to 1.6 inches (26 to 40 mm) long. The male is predominately blue on the sides of its thorax, and the upper side of its abdomen. Its lower abdominal appendages are longer than its upper appendages. The female's body is greenish-yellow to brown [...]