FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   >>  
ting abdomen the tail or rudder. On wing the dragon-fly is one of the swiftest and most powerful insects. The dragon-flies are found all over the world being most abundant in the warmer regions where rainfall and bodies of water are abundant. For breeding they require water, their immature stages living under water feeding on aquatic animal life. Our present order of dragon-flies is the remains of an ancient race of insects of immense size. From fossil remains we learn that ancient dragon-flies had a wing expanse of three feet. [Illustration: Cast off skin of dragon-fly nymph, showing shape and position taken on a twig when the adult winged form emerged from the last nymph stage.] The dragon-fly is a beneficial insect thruout life. The young feed on mosquito wigglers and similar life in ponds and streams while the adults dart here and there over ponds, fields or lawn catching mosquitoes and other winged insects. Many look upon the dragon-fly as a dangerous stinging insect but it is entirely harmless and can be handled without the least danger. They vary greatly in size and appearance. The so-called damsel-flies form a group of dragon-flies or Odonata which rest with the wings in a vertical position and the young aquatic stages are more slender. In color markings dragon-flies include all hues of the rainbow tho as a rule they do not have such extravagant colors as the butterflies. [Illustration: One of our common dragon-flies found about ponds and streams.] OBSERVATIONS AND FIELD STUDIES Go into the fields and study and collect the different kinds of dragon-flies and their young stages from the bottoms of ponds. How swiftly can they fly? Do they fly high in the air as well as near the water or surface of the earth? Can you see them catch other insects? Do birds catch them and eat them? Take a position along the edge of a pond and as they come flying by swing swiftly with your net and catch one. Examine it carefully. Note the strength of the long, slender wings with their lace-like network of veins. Measure the distance across the back from tip to tip of wings. Compare this with the length from tip of head to the tip of the abdomen. Examine the head with its large compound eyes and the chewing mouth parts. Note the strong thorax which is filled with muscles to operate the wings in flight. How many segments are there to the abdomen? With the hands or with a bucket dip up a quantity of mud and trash from th
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   >>  



Top keywords:

dragon

 

insects

 
stages
 

position

 

abdomen

 

swiftly

 

ancient

 

Examine

 

fields

 
insect

streams
 

winged

 

Illustration

 
remains
 
aquatic
 

slender

 

abundant

 
extravagant
 

bottoms

 
common

OBSERVATIONS

 
butterflies
 
STUDIES
 

surface

 

colors

 

collect

 
thorax
 

strong

 

filled

 
muscles

operate
 

compound

 

chewing

 

flight

 

quantity

 

segments

 

bucket

 

length

 

carefully

 
flying

strength
 
Compare
 

distance

 

Measure

 

network

 
fossil
 

immense

 

expanse

 

showing

 

present