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| Entomology:  ODONATA 1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Order: Odonata (Contact)    
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                 Odonata --
  are predacious insects with biting mouthparts.  They have two similar pairs of wings with characteristic
  reticulate venation; prominent eyes and small antennae.  The abdomen is elongated with accessory
  male genitalia on the 2nd and 3rd sterna. 
  The metamorphosis is Hemimetabolous, the naiads are aquatic and they
  have a modified labium known as the mask.               There are two suborders, the Anisoptera,
  where the naiads are without external gills but rather have rectal gills, and
  Zygoptera,
  where there are three prominent external and terminal gills.             Fossil Record.
  -- Specimens date back to over 250 million years.  Although present day forms have a wingspread of about 13 cm,
  extinct forms had a 3/4 meter wingspread. 
               Body Form.
  -- They are all large insects, and in the Carboniferous period genera existed
  which had a wing expanse of two feet. They are strong and rapid fliers,
  catching their food, in the form of small insects, on the wing. The forwardly
  directed legs play an important part in catching the prey and holding it
  while it is chewed. 
 
               All the mouth appendages are
  toothed, and the maxillae and labium augment the mandibles in chewing
  capacity unlike most insects with biting mouthparts.  They can inflict serious bites if
  handled.  The compound eyes of Odonata
  are the largest of all insects, which gives them vision in multiple
  directions.  Thus, they are able to
  escape avian predators and are difficult to catch with a net.               Mating.
  -- The process is quite unique for insects. 
  Although the male pore is on segment 9 of the abdomen, the copulatory
  apparatus is found in the sternal region of segments 2 and 3.  Before copulation, spermatozoa are
  transferred to this structure.  The
  male then grasps the female in the region of the prothorax by means of his
  posterior abdominal claspers. While in flight in this tandem position the
  female turns her abdomen down and forwards and receives sperm from the
  accessory copulatory structure of the male.              Oviposition.
  -- Dragonfly eggs are laid in water or on waterweeds. The naiads breathe with
  tracheal gills and are of two kinds: (I) those with external gills in the
  positions of cerci anales and caudal filaments and caudal filaments-Zygoptera,
  (2) those with gills on the walls of the rectum- Anisoptera. In
  the latter case water is pumped in and out through the anus, and this action
  may be made use of in locomotion-the sudden expulsion of water causing a
  rapid forward movement on the part of the naiad. However, the naiads on the
  whole slow-moving creatures, lurking well camouflaged among waterweeds while
  in wait for their prey. The main difference between the mouthparts of the
  naiad and imago concerns the labium. In the adult this has normal
  proportions, but in the naiad the post- mentum and prementum are elongated
  and capable of being shot out rapidly from the folded resting position,
  thereby impaling the prey, e.g., a tadpole, on the labial hooks.   
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