.png)
A female of the migratory species globe skimmer (Pantala flavescens).
Photo Credit: Johanna Hedlund
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Dragonfly Migration Dynamics
The Core Concept: Dragonflies and damselflies (order Odonata) are capable of extreme, long-distance migrations across continents and open oceans, representing a massive but largely unseen global movement of biomass.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike the vast majority of migratory insects that must complete their journeys across multiple successive generations, certain dragonfly species possess the rare physiological capacity to execute an entire round-trip migration cycle within a single lifetime, rivaling the navigational feats of migratory birds.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Evolutionary Adaptation: Migration pathways have evolved independently multiple times across Odonata species, functioning primarily as a biological mechanism to escape adverse environmental conditions such as extreme cold, drought, or degraded reproductive habitats.
- Altitudinal and Transoceanic Navigation: Migratory routes range from localized vertical altitudinal shifts (moving to cooler mountain elevations and returning) to vast transoceanic journeys, such as the globe skimmer's (Pantala flavescens) multi-thousand-kilometer flights spanning India, the Maldives, and eastern Africa.
- Bio-Indicator Function: Because they are highly sensitive to water quality and environmental shifts, migratory dragonflies act as observable biological sensors, providing a visible proxy for tracking the mass migration of other, less visible insect populations.
.png)




.jpg)

.png)

.jpg)



