Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) are well-known but often poorly understood insects. Their phylogeny and classification have proved difficult to understand but, through use of modern morphological and molecular techniques, is becoming better understood and is discussed here. Although not considered to be of high economic importance, they do provide esthetic/spiritual benefits to humans, and may have some impact as predators of disease vectors and agricultural pests. In addition, their larvae are very important as intermediate or top predators in many aquatic ecosystems. More recently, they have been the objects of study that have yielded new information on the mechanics and control of insect flight
Dragonflies (Odonata) are one of the ancestral groups of extant insects. They represent one of the t...
Abstract: Odonates can be utilized as biological markers of environmental quality and play a criti...
Abstract- A total of 34 species of odonates, including 26 species of dragonflies (sub-order Anisopte...
Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) present an unparalleled insect model to integrate evolutionary...
Upper-level predators such as Odonata/Odanates (dragonflies—Anisoptera; dam-selflies—Zygoptera) are ...
The Odonata Order has a wide geographical distribution. The life cycle is complex, with stage of aqu...
The order Odonata includes both the dragonflies and damselflies, separated into three suborders, nam...
Copyright: © Adarsh et al. 2014. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. JoTT allow...
For a measure of ecological work on aquatic insects in general we will use as a yardstick the presen...
Dragonflies and damselflies are a charismatic, medium-sized insect order (~6300 species) with a uniq...
This study is aimed at the phenomenon of migration, which is not still fully explored and which, by ...
The Odonata is one of the primitive and ancient insect orders. It is very diverse and is the second ...
The status and trends of global biodiversity are often measured with a bias towards datasets limited...
Dragonflies and damselflies together compose the order Odonata. Odonates are insectivorous, filling ...
Odonates are ecologically important as both predators and prey. Their larvae constitute a natural bi...
Dragonflies (Odonata) are one of the ancestral groups of extant insects. They represent one of the t...
Abstract: Odonates can be utilized as biological markers of environmental quality and play a criti...
Abstract- A total of 34 species of odonates, including 26 species of dragonflies (sub-order Anisopte...
Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) present an unparalleled insect model to integrate evolutionary...
Upper-level predators such as Odonata/Odanates (dragonflies—Anisoptera; dam-selflies—Zygoptera) are ...
The Odonata Order has a wide geographical distribution. The life cycle is complex, with stage of aqu...
The order Odonata includes both the dragonflies and damselflies, separated into three suborders, nam...
Copyright: © Adarsh et al. 2014. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. JoTT allow...
For a measure of ecological work on aquatic insects in general we will use as a yardstick the presen...
Dragonflies and damselflies are a charismatic, medium-sized insect order (~6300 species) with a uniq...
This study is aimed at the phenomenon of migration, which is not still fully explored and which, by ...
The Odonata is one of the primitive and ancient insect orders. It is very diverse and is the second ...
The status and trends of global biodiversity are often measured with a bias towards datasets limited...
Dragonflies and damselflies together compose the order Odonata. Odonates are insectivorous, filling ...
Odonates are ecologically important as both predators and prey. Their larvae constitute a natural bi...
Dragonflies (Odonata) are one of the ancestral groups of extant insects. They represent one of the t...
Abstract: Odonates can be utilized as biological markers of environmental quality and play a criti...
Abstract- A total of 34 species of odonates, including 26 species of dragonflies (sub-order Anisopte...