What Makes Dragonflies So Extraordinary

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @terramater
    @terramater Год назад +54

    They're so fascinating! Our camera crew spent a whole summer in a lake, observing their behaviour and getting some astonishing close-ups; the footage is so amazing!

  • @g26s239
    @g26s239 Год назад +193

    30 MPH is flat out amazing for such a small animal. Dr Ware's nerdish enthusiasm is cool.

  • @TheFeldhamster
    @TheFeldhamster Год назад +428

    That footage of the frog jumping and missing because the dragonfly quickly took off was amazing.

    • @4saken404
      @4saken404 Год назад +13

      lol I had to go back and rewatch it like 5 times. Amazing, yes. But I ain't gonna lie. Mostly for the lulz. 😅

    • @cherylmarcuri5506
      @cherylmarcuri5506 Год назад +2

      And hysterical!

    • @mommakeeks4265
      @mommakeeks4265 11 месяцев назад +24

      8:45

    • @brosephgraves
      @brosephgraves 7 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@mommakeeks4265 thank you

    • @ghostman5620
      @ghostman5620 5 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks for the timestamp.

  • @olavl8827
    @olavl8827 Год назад +251

    Not only are they good flyers, dragonflies are intelligent too. Now they won't be winning any maths contests and they're not interested in solving puzzles, but they really do make the best possible use of their tiny brains and huge eyes. They have fantastic 3D spatial awareness and can accurately estimate speeds and trajectories of all things around them. They don't just chase after prey, they intercept them in flight.

    • @thetabest
      @thetabest 8 месяцев назад +1

      Smart for insects

    • @garebaregoof4226
      @garebaregoof4226 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@thetabestthere’s different kinds of intelligence. Just because humans are superior in one aspect of intelligence doesn’t mean other creatures are superior to us in intelligence of other aspects.
      For example, their intelligence seeps into their flight. They have areas in their brain to individually control each wing.
      Not to mention what olavl said, vision, speed tracking, and interception.
      I think “for an insect” is doing a disservice to their niche intelligence.

    • @Yosetime
      @Yosetime 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@garebaregoof4226 I don't think that comment was meant to insult anything. It was an innocent compliment actually. It didn't need to be called out in that way.
      But I would add that there are humans who really do have less intelligence than dragonflies, and many other animal species. You'll see this phenomena in social media on the daily, and on many policing videos showing bodycam footage of criminals caught in the act or trying to get away and even some bringing toy guns to a police shootout with real guns. In those scenarios, how can we say that human 'niche' intelligence is any more advanced than any other species or niche?
      If you look at countries like Russia, the Middle East, and yes, even the US, do we not see willful self-destruction of each other on top of the destruction of our natural world? No other species of anything on earth participates in the willful self-destruction of anything that is not related to basic survival, than human beings.
      So we cannot say humans have superior intelligence in any aspect other than we have the advantage of being able to educate ourselves, to understand far-reaching consequences and complex relationships, and, most importantly, we have 'self-awareness'. But even with all these abilities that we like to call 'superior intelligence' that set us apart from other species, we still have not learned how to live in compatibility with the natural world. And that in itself will probably lead to one of those many evolutionary events of the past, if we use the laws of natural selection, that will surely cause our downfall. Or at least, an evolutionary change that will force humans back into the natural order of things, if that is even possible.
      Going full circle back to your response to that comment when you said "Just because humans are superior in one aspect of intelligence doesn’t mean other creatures are superior to us in intelligence of other aspects." I would have to disagree. Other creatures are indeed superior to us in intelligence of many aspects. I would like to think that you had just made a typo in that statement and meant to place the word 'not' before 'superior' as in "Just because humans are superior in one aspect of intelligence doesn’t mean other creatures are NOT superior to us in intelligence of other aspects.". Because that makes so much more sense and would explain the rest of your comment.

    • @Donna-qv4nq
      @Donna-qv4nq 7 месяцев назад

      Miracles ❤

    • @Donna-qv4nq
      @Donna-qv4nq 7 месяцев назад

      I like human beans like "Bud not Buddy" does

  • @burnyizland
    @burnyizland Год назад +273

    She is delightful! I already love dragon flies but she made this an A+ production, she's so entertaining and knowledgeable, warm and funny, all at the same time. Great Job!

    • @Quest4Unknown
      @Quest4Unknown 9 месяцев назад +6

      Totally agree! 👍🏼

    • @jude1515
      @jude1515 9 месяцев назад +5

      She is.

    • @Panamama-23F
      @Panamama-23F 9 месяцев назад +5

      LOVE dragonflies! Lots of them in NH around my little lake. Once studied and photographed a nymph on my railing for the 4 hour hatching process. It was so fascinating, like nothing else!
      Thanks for this great video! 10:47

    • @burnyizland
      @burnyizland 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@Panamama-23F That is so cool! You have to have real patience to get to know these wily guys.
      When I was a kid I used to lay in a field, perfectly still, for as long as it took for them to land on me. Magical.

  • @dianahutsel7101
    @dianahutsel7101 11 месяцев назад +280

    When my oldest daughter was younger, I told her a story I had heard as a child. Dragonflies turn into Fairies at night, and that during the day you could talk to them and they would remember you and seek you out at night as a Fairy 🧚‍♀️ . She would enjoy hours of talking to her dragonflies by the water sitting on hugh rocks in the sun. It was magical.
    With my Grand daughter I took it a step furthur, and together we built a beautiful Fairy garden underneath an old tree in my front yard, complete with Fairy houses, benches, and a tiny doghouse complete with a tiny dog. He magically comes to life at night with the Fairies, of course.
    Needless to say, we all love dragonflies. ❤

    • @DayneandtheStars
      @DayneandtheStars 7 месяцев назад +9

      that is lovely! What a great memory to have! You made your daughter's and grandaughter's childhood magical

    • @calamar1e320
      @calamar1e320 5 месяцев назад +6

      This is such a beautiful thing to hear. Associating nature with magic and mystical beings is such a gift in childhood :')

    • @billblendick9780
      @billblendick9780 5 месяцев назад +4

      Wonderful story ….. wonderful imagry !

    • @Liminarts
      @Liminarts 5 месяцев назад +4

      Oh this is so sweet! I want to have a mom/grandma like you next time 💖

    • @TT-di4qz
      @TT-di4qz 5 месяцев назад +3

      I love this!!! ❤❤

  • @miffedmax
    @miffedmax Год назад +495

    My yard suffers from mosquitoes from April through June. Then, for some reason, a host of dragonflies descends and the annual Great Mosquito Massacre occurs. Love me some dragonflies!

    • @MRConner-du3yg
      @MRConner-du3yg 9 месяцев назад +1

      Guhl me too

    • @Yosetime
      @Yosetime 7 месяцев назад +12

      I think we should be able to go to a store to buy dragonflies for our backyards so we can stop the mosquito takeover before it becomes unbearable. No yard or person should ever have to suffer from the repeat petty criminal offenders that mosquitos are! I'd like to take a pack of premium grade dragonflies with me on camping and fishing trips too. If I could teach them to follow me around like security guards against mosquitos and flies I'd do that. I would do that. I'd probably be willing to spend good money on it too! Just to be able to sit around the campfire or on a fishing dock in peace and without needing to spray a full can of that disgusting repellant all over me, yes, I'd invest in that.
      I think these researchers should be spending time figuring out how to use and train dragonflies for human bug security. Now that would be a scientific breaththrough worth millions! They could breed for specific traits and develop tactical units for specific bug control scenarios. And if it can be done just so a semi-privileged person in a first-world country can sit my lazy butt in a chair without the annoying mosquitos buzzing around me, imagine the good they could do in disease prevention in countries where mosquitoes have risen to felony level criminals in organized crime rings that are spreading life-threatening diseases everywhere?
      If these researchers here in this video are devoting whole careers and educational degrees to just studying dragonflies, surely they will come up with a way to use their findings to solve some of these problems? They better be! Because otherwise, who would spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a graduate degree in dragonfly genealogy? I don't think there's a whole lot of job openings for dragonfly science specifically. Unless we do figure out how to breed and train them for personal bug security. Then, yeah, let's do that. Give scholarships for those degrees! Many scholarships!
      If it ever happens, I would like to pre-order the premium species with full tactical training in camping and fishing security, and possibly a small indoor habitat of domesticated dragonflies to grab any insects that might make it indoors and, god forbid, if a cartel of fruit flies invade my fruit basket! I would go so far as to name those dragonflies and call them family. We should also have neighborhood dragonfly security teams at the ready for when the June bugs do their annual hugging-of-house-exteriors by the thousands, and for other such yearly invasions by other home-hugging species that make getting through your front door a creepy experience.
      Yes, it all sounds like fun and games and wishful thinking, until you're covered in mosquito bites because you forgot your chemical spray of protection. Then the thought of having a specialized tactical force of dragonflies is not such a far-reaching idea. I'd do it. I would.

    • @SuperiorHound
      @SuperiorHound 7 месяцев назад

      Where I live (Minnesota’s North Shore) that’s followed by gulls that feast on the dragonflies. I hate that part.

    • @ericschulze5641
      @ericschulze5641 7 месяцев назад +6

      I'm just glad mosquitoes aren't as big as dragonflies

    • @viviancovington7813
      @viviancovington7813 6 месяцев назад +1

      Great idea! Just added some dragonfly hat clips to my cart. 😊❤

  • @xela552
    @xela552 Год назад +231

    Dr Ware is a fantastic communicator

    • @RiverWilliamson
      @RiverWilliamson Год назад +18

      I love when a scientist can switch between common and scientific language.

    • @parkedawn
      @parkedawn Год назад +9

      Dr. Ware is fantastic.

    • @oldtimer2192
      @oldtimer2192 Год назад +1

      A brilliant presentation!
      BTW just think of the deep time involved in the evolution of dragonflies here, 400 Million years, that’s 400,000 years and multiply that by 1000!
      Just a human lifetime of 80 years seems long and our minds can’t really fully appreciate these kinds of time scales!

    • @nerfherder4284
      @nerfherder4284 Год назад +5

      I have a nerd crush on her ♥️

    • @thekongstocks
      @thekongstocks Год назад

      "New School" evolutionary biologist and entomologist: Jessica Lee Ware, PhD

  • @amherst88
    @amherst88 Год назад +533

    When I lived in the FL everglades and would ride my bike at almost dusk I would be surrounded by dragonflies hunting for the mosquitoes I was attracting -- it was somewhat magical, I thought of it as (not swimming with the dolphins but) riding with the dragonflies 🌴

    • @fuxan
      @fuxan Год назад +31

      That is poetic. I love a good dragonfly shield...especially as a Floridian.

    • @d.k.1394
      @d.k.1394 Год назад +2

      Lol

    • @Robert-tj3qq
      @Robert-tj3qq Год назад +19

      Years ago,a friend and I were canoeing in the Everglades. One night out on a chickee in the middle of nowhere we were getting dangerously eaten alive by mosquitoes ,it was real bad !! Then out of nowhere dragonfly's showed up ,we got up and jumped for joy ! As they flew around us ,it was Amazing . I love the dragonfly ❤

    • @MeltiahNye
      @MeltiahNye 10 месяцев назад +2

      That's pretty cool,

    • @jude1515
      @jude1515 9 месяцев назад +4

      That sounds so nice.

  • @DanElser
    @DanElser Год назад +75

    I have revived Dragon flies that were incapsulated in ice. The first time, I found one Griff Creek, North Lake Tahoe, I had a hunch, removed it from the ice and water, warmed it up and sure enough it flew away. the next time it was late fall, it had rained, filled an empty bowl with rain water and one got trapped and over night the water froze. So when I found him in the morning I removed the sheet of ice his wings were inside of and set it in the sun. You have to be carful, it's a slow process. It helps to blow your breath on them, that seems to really do the trick. Eventually he started to wiggle and move around, then took off. I have some photos and video if anyone is interested.

    • @Womble1252
      @Womble1252 11 месяцев назад +3

      Great story, make a vid with your photos? 😊

    • @d777b
      @d777b 5 месяцев назад

      thank you! @DanElser

    • @anitalornie1743
      @anitalornie1743 4 месяца назад

      Amazing, thanks!

  • @bobyoung1698
    @bobyoung1698 9 месяцев назад +80

    I love her enthusiasm for a creature many people aren't even aware of.

    • @wqv5423ln
      @wqv5423ln 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yes... But dragon fly "evolution" ? Lol ! These marvelous insects are part of God's marvelous creation !

    • @tippong21
      @tippong21 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@wqv5423lnJust like children with cancer. God sure is great.

    • @CongressSux1776
      @CongressSux1776 5 месяцев назад

      @@tippong21
      Your sarcasm isn’t cute.
      You think God gives children cancer? You need to wake up

    • @cliftongaither6642
      @cliftongaither6642 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@wqv5423ln 😂😂😂 whatever you say. 🙄

    • @wqv5423ln
      @wqv5423ln 4 месяца назад

      @@tippong21 Read a Bible and you can understand who Got is and why there is sickness and suffering in the world.
      The wages of sin is death, BUT the gift of God is eternal life. John 3:16-21

  • @AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory
    @AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory Год назад +117

    We love all insects, but we're pretty partial to Team Odonata. Time machine goal: seeing Meganeura in flight!

    • @seethlaemmert5175
      @seethlaemmert5175 5 месяцев назад

      I hand to admit that I would scream and run, coming across insects that big flying at me.

    • @ni_wink84
      @ni_wink84 4 месяца назад

      No we don’t but dragonflies are an exception

  • @jfu5222
    @jfu5222 Год назад +56

    Ayumu Sasaki, grand prix motorcycle racer, has always featured dragonflies in the designs on his helmets. The artwork has varied, classical or stylised, the depictions of dragonflies on samurai helmets made me smile and think of this very talented young rider. I always thought the inspiration was the maneuverability of a racing motorcycle, but maybe it is in homage to those helmets of his ancestors.

    • @IndriidaeNT
      @IndriidaeNT Год назад +2

      This video is so cool, it gives great information on dragonflies and damselflies in terms of their natural history and entomology I have never realized or discovered before. I didn’t know about fliers and perchers and I also didn’t know that while dragonflies are know to eat mosquitoes that carry Malaria and Yellow Fever to stop humans from being infected by them when they feed, I never heard of Dengue, another disease carried by mosquitoes before. I need to do more research on it. Don’t you agree?

    • @kristianvrum8979
      @kristianvrum8979 Год назад +1

      I read recently that, for the samurais, the dragonfly was a symbol of strength, agility and victory in battle. Don't know if it's true, but at least it makes perfect sense to me 🙂

  • @marisapatch431
    @marisapatch431 Год назад +71

    I had no idea dragonflies were so good at flying! This video really helped me form a deeper appreciation for dragonflies :)

    • @NOMAD-qp3dd
      @NOMAD-qp3dd Год назад +2

      Yea knowing they eat flies and mosquitos i tell my kids not to hurt dragon flies. 😂

    • @dariusowens1060
      @dariusowens1060 5 месяцев назад

      They have sex while flying
      To I watch them when I’m
      On break at work 😂

  • @boydvo8192
    @boydvo8192 Год назад +72

    I love listening to scientists like this who are knowledgeable, passionate, and thoughtful. They usually have an optimistic view of the world and want to use their specific field of study to help the world at large.

    • @Yosetime
      @Yosetime 7 месяцев назад

      Very true. But if they do not find a real-world problem solving use for all this knowledge, then it's just words written in a scientific journal. There has to be some purpose for these studies that, at the very least, helps us understand something profound enough to solve some other mystery of the natural world. And there are so many mysteries!

    • @wqv5423ln
      @wqv5423ln 5 месяцев назад +1

      I woship the true, living, God who created all these insects, and every other marvelous creature !
      When I'm driving along the highways I sing a favorite hymn called " How great thou art" ! Look it up and see read the words.

    • @jockogle5250
      @jockogle5250 5 месяцев назад

      " What is your favorite insect" should be a question in the presidential election debate.

  • @Showmeromi
    @Showmeromi Год назад +51

    So well executed. great writers behind this.

  • @lazyhoundracing9621
    @lazyhoundracing9621 Год назад +33

    Last summer I was eating lunch in my truck facing a small wet grassy ditch between the parking lot and the road. One dragonfly would fly low down the center of the ditch and scare up mosquitos while the others waited at the sides. When the mosquitos would fly up the others would swoop in and eat them. Then the process would repeat. It was so cool and obvious what they were doing.

  • @BajaSurf
    @BajaSurf 11 месяцев назад +15

    This documentary was a treat in every way. The chemistry between the two scientists was amazing.

    • @johnghilduta3016
      @johnghilduta3016 3 месяца назад

      Is a chemistry of intelligent with the passion!

  • @RiverWilliamson
    @RiverWilliamson Год назад +22

    With special audio guest, my favorite insect: CICADAS

  • @jamiepski
    @jamiepski Год назад +56

    I was told years ago that if a dragonfly would land on you it would bring you good luck.

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Год назад +2

      Has it been proven to be true, though?

    • @jamiepski
      @jamiepski Год назад +7

      I think so. They have always brought me good luck.

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Год назад

      @@jamiepski great to hear

    • @varonadee6980
      @varonadee6980 Год назад +9

      Even if they don't bring future good luck, I felt extremely lucky, even privileged, when one landed perfectly in the center of my sternum, with it's wings outstretched, head facing up, and remained there for about eight seconds before flying off.

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Год назад +1

      @@varonadee6980 that's so cool

  • @John-yl3lj
    @John-yl3lj Год назад +16

    Dragonflies are truly amazing insects and love having them around the yard when the mosquitos are prevalent. I wasn't aware that the Dragonflies lineage was one of the oldest until I recently watched the Netflix series 'Life on our Planet' narrated by Morgan Freeman. Now I am also aware of the different styles of Dragonflies wings. Many thanks.

  • @ljoc7455
    @ljoc7455 6 месяцев назад +18

    My Irish Granny used to tell me that dragonflies are the fairies using their magic to disguise themselves from humans

    • @Logan-Esq
      @Logan-Esq 5 месяцев назад

      Right so that’s occult and you shouldn’t listen to it lest the demons get into your life. Stick with the Gospel.

    • @MsRoxie718
      @MsRoxie718 5 месяцев назад +1

      I love that!!!! 💕💕💕

  • @UrbanDragon
    @UrbanDragon Год назад +62

    a friend who passed away in 2021 at a far too young of an age held that dragonflies were part of the afterlife, loved ones returning to check on us, the first time that another friend and I were able to meet after her death a dragonfly laned on me as we sat at the outside table. Our family and friends all see dragonflies as Steff coming by to see us.

    • @cmoniz905
      @cmoniz905 6 месяцев назад +2

      I have heard the same thing. There are time I am thinking of my dad or great grandmother and all of a sudden dragonflies appear. It could just be coincidence but I like to think they are coming to check on me.

    • @Elizabeth-vw1vb
      @Elizabeth-vw1vb 5 месяцев назад

      My mom was in hospice and dozens of dragonflies would land on the windows when someone passed.

    • @coreyspiano9890
      @coreyspiano9890 5 месяцев назад +1

      I had a similar experience when my father passed, but it was butterflies 🦋

    • @citygirlingraham
      @citygirlingraham 5 месяцев назад

      That’s beautiful.

    • @EdilaLewis
      @EdilaLewis 4 месяца назад +1

      When I visit the cemetery 🪦 as I put the flowers down the beautiful teal blue dragonfly harvard around the flowers as I finish my prayer the dragonfly flew away

  • @robertdicarlo4490
    @robertdicarlo4490 5 месяцев назад +8

    Growing up near New Orleans I only knew them as Mosquito Hawks until I was older. Early in the morning I have seen a small dead tree completely covered with Dragonflies waiting for the sun to dry the dew off of their wings. Awesome !!!

    • @mrrpswife
      @mrrpswife 4 месяца назад

      Yep same here - and there were so many colors!

  • @ronkirk5099
    @ronkirk5099 Год назад +78

    Even at the end of their life cycle, dragonflies are beneficial to the health of the ecosystem. While kayaking along the shore of the Great Slave Lake in Canada, I saw dragonflies in the thousands after they had reproduced at the end of their life cycle die and fall into the water. Several hundred ducks were paddling around eating them as they settled on the water. I imagine this is an important source of food for ducks in the fall before they start their long migration south.

    • @lindav873
      @lindav873 5 месяцев назад +1

      1 day while fishing on the lake a dragon fly landed in the water fluttering like it maybe drowning. All the sudden a baby dragon fly appeared. The bigger one took off. It was weird.

  • @4saken404
    @4saken404 Год назад +68

    Fun fact: If you are the chill type you can hold up a finger and get a dragonfly with enough trust to perch on it. And they will just gladly hang out there. :3

    • @MelodieBallman
      @MelodieBallman 5 месяцев назад

      My family doesn’t have to… they stalk us and just land or hover!

    • @evalunloca
      @evalunloca 5 месяцев назад +5

      I did this not too long ago I put out my finger totally not expecting anything. Circled back and chilled with me for a minute. It was beautiful

    • @rickcollin5600
      @rickcollin5600 4 месяца назад

      On your back on a pool float, they will land on your toes. I've had them land on the rim of a beer bottle and I think they were drinking from the drop on the lip.

    • @JM-zo5me
      @JM-zo5me 3 месяца назад

      I’ve done it. 😊

  • @glossaria2
    @glossaria2 Год назад +8

    Dragonflies are my favorite insects, too! I love that they're fierce and delicate at the same time, and their colors and wing patterns and flight fascinate me. I'm still learning to identify them (and I'll admit, the sexual dimorphism throws me sometimes.) There's a pond in the Adirondacks that I visit periodically during the summer where I can sit and watch them for hours. Depending on when I visit, I'll see entirely different sets of species.
    They're fearless, too-- they'll let me get *incredibly* close (within a couple of inches) to photograph them, sometimes even taking off and landing again immediately in the same spot at a more advantageous angle, as if they're posing for their close-up.
    My grandmother (who was from southern Germany) always used to say that it was good luck to have a dragonfly light on you.

  • @koicaine1230
    @koicaine1230 Год назад +23

    I love these guys! They started showing up after I made a pond from an above ground pool. They are excellent hunters of pests like Mosquitoes and Flies. They have a larval stage that needs water which is why they showed up in the pond.

    • @carpediemarts705
      @carpediemarts705 Год назад +4

      The swimming larval version lives for 3 years and the flying form 3 months

    • @ravenmeyer3740
      @ravenmeyer3740 Год назад

      In my ignorant outlook, 3 months isn’t very long. 😢

    • @aldoconciso
      @aldoconciso 10 месяцев назад

      In our 10sqm pond there are 4 different species which appear at different moments along the summer. Some of them were still flying in late november last year

  • @nathanaelcard
    @nathanaelcard Год назад +11

    These two are awesome. @pbsterra, the video description deserves to have Rhema Uche-Dike's name in it with Dr Ware's

  • @davidbrevik2537
    @davidbrevik2537 Год назад +21

    Dragonflies are one of the few insects I like! I'm glad to see they get their own video.

  • @ellenmadsen7308
    @ellenmadsen7308 11 месяцев назад +3

    Evinrude was my favorite Disney character when I was a kid. Excellent program on the best insect ever!

  • @georgemoore2226
    @georgemoore2226 Год назад +12

    Indigenous people in the south west U.S. believe dragonflies are connected to water and are sacred.
    They are often depicted in the art- as a way of requesting more water.
    Most excellent presentation.
    Interesting, very informative, educational.

  • @katiemiller2062
    @katiemiller2062 7 месяцев назад +3

    Last summer I had a dragonfly nymph molt into a dragonfly on my hand, dry its wings, and fly away. The whole process took about 45 minutes and was the coolest thing ever.

  • @Heykyddo
    @Heykyddo Месяц назад

    I loved this!!!! Thank you for interviewing such unique individuals. The way they’re stoked about dragonflies is how I wish everyone was stoked about life! You can learn from people who are passionate about their niche focus way more than a stale professor!😊

  • @jodywho6696
    @jodywho6696 Год назад +17

    Yes. More videos about insects. Drangon flies are my body guards✨

  • @nucleargrizzly1776
    @nucleargrizzly1776 Год назад +17

    Dragonflies made growing up in the Louisiana wetlands manageable. Used to sit on the porch and watch the winged dragons snatch horseflies and mosquitos we attracted out of the air.

  • @midwestdumpster
    @midwestdumpster Год назад +8

    I remember when I was a young child playing in the sandbox, which was in a fenced-in corner of the property beside the garage a Dragonfly hovered over the only way in or out for a good half hour, not sure what it was doing but I was terrified and will never forget that day XD

  • @helicopsyche
    @helicopsyche Год назад +11

    Good video! As someone who identifies macroinvertebrates, it's nice to put a face to one of the people responsible for our ever improving taxonomy, even if splitting Gomphus into a bunch of genera was a big pain in the butt for me.

  • @howardb42006
    @howardb42006 6 месяцев назад +3

    I had a dragonfly land on my finger when I was canoeing in Maine. They have been my favorite insect since !

  • @krista68
    @krista68 6 месяцев назад +1

    Jessica and Rhema are such an inspiration! The depth of their scholarship, their passion + awe for natural history, and their overall vibrancy as humans came through so well in this video. Thank you to them and the production team for sharing this glimpse into dragonfly evolution with us!

  • @themostselfishman
    @themostselfishman Год назад +17

    Incredible video, content and presentation just top notch.

  • @axiomist4488
    @axiomist4488 6 месяцев назад +2

    They are my favorite insect too. What I'd love to see is a program explaining why the multitude of colors exists / how they came to be . There are so many different colored dragon flies that it's fascinating .

  • @theneustadt
    @theneustadt Год назад +4

    Thanks for including views of our Tiffany "Dragfonly" Lamps at the end of this fascinating episode. While we are expert about Tiffany's lamps, we didn't know much about the dragonfly and we learned a lot. What extraordinary insects! Thank you for sharing your knowledge in a way that is entertaining and accessible.

  • @alisonwedd9750
    @alisonwedd9750 6 месяцев назад +2

    I’ve noticed they read my thoughts also. I’ve had them circle me if lonely, like they’re spreading love dust around me. I’m widowed with 8 adult children now. I’m always in nature…Sometimes dragonflies circle me as helping me connect to a loved one on the other side.

  • @RWildekrav66
    @RWildekrav66 5 месяцев назад +3

    Dragonflies , Praying Mantis , Honey bees, Fireflies and Butterflies , coolest insects of all time .
    Also , Mothra when Godzilla is running Amok !

  • @renedemers8218
    @renedemers8218 Год назад +7

    Odonata are also my favorites. This is a delightful video!!!

  • @JalenJaguar
    @JalenJaguar Год назад +25

    There is something so beautifully comforting about seeing black folk be so happily engaged in nature in this way, they were beyond informational & engaging & I loved it 🪰💓🪰

    • @jamesarnette1394
      @jamesarnette1394 Год назад +2

      Racist

    • @yessumify
      @yessumify 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​​@@jamesarnette1394 yeah what the heck? My thoughts exactly

    • @Tonyhouse1168
      @Tonyhouse1168 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah, it’s absolutely racist to see our folks be educated and interested in the world around us. Takes either a big set of testes or a small brain to comment on someone’s post that they’re racist; it’s pretty easy to see which of those y’all possess.

    • @maiafay
      @maiafay 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@jamesarnette1394isn’t this what is encouraged? Wanted? I mean DEI was created just for this purpose. Now it’s racist to point it out? Our society is so damn concerned about skin color , this was exactly the first thought I had. I was surprised one of them didn’t start a sentence with, “as a woman/man of color” because it’s now so ingrained into everything. It’s not racist. It’s what progressives wanted.

    • @jamesarnette1394
      @jamesarnette1394 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@maiafay no. This is not what progressives wanted. This shows me that you're not a progressive, but rather a regressive.

  • @Talik13
    @Talik13 Год назад +8

    Holy crap. I knew dragonflies were cool ever since I was a kid. I didn't realize they were THIS C O O L !

  • @Raffaele276
    @Raffaele276 Год назад +15

    Dragon fly lore. My ‘fishing with a dragon fly’ experience. They are my favorite insects, beauty, design, agility and dare say intelligence? I fished a pond in Northern California consistently for many years. Teeming with flora, aquatic life and dragon flies, I came to observe, admire and become fascinated with these amazing creatures. I would fish from a very small, one man raft, nearly at water level, sitting down. I used an artificial lure, which requires successive, multiple casts and retrievals. After several casts and returns, I noticed a dragon fly following ( flying after) my cast lure to the point it hit the water, and then hovering there. Thinking this was a fluke, I repeated the cast, retrieval sequence several more times, it really was happening. Whats more the dragon fly would follow my lure’s retrieval back to me (the raft) and then, this is even more amazing, it would position (hover) itself above and behind me, at rod level, as I raised and drew back the rod to cast again. It seemed as if it was waiting for me to cast again, so we could start the whole cast, follow, retrieve, cast sequence again. I tested this occurrence more than a dozen times and each time it was the same. I was left with this over whelming wonderful feeling that I had somehow connected with? communicated with? nature, an insect no less, and we were actually playing a game together of cross species ‘go fetch’.

    • @PimpCatTV
      @PimpCatTV Год назад

      Great little story raff

  • @BT-kt7gb
    @BT-kt7gb 5 месяцев назад +1

    When I moved into my dad's house a while back, there was a really bad horse fly problem. I noticed this year that we noticed dragonflies all over the property. I knew they would get rid of the mosquitos but had no idea about the flies.We didn't have a problem with horse flies this year, either. I am thankful for them.

  • @susanmclee5209
    @susanmclee5209 11 месяцев назад +5

    When i was a child, the term for a "dragonfly" here in the South, was "mosquito hawk". I rarely hear that term used in this day and age.

    • @purpurina5663
      @purpurina5663 6 месяцев назад

      In Spanish they are calle "libélula", but their colloquial name is "matapiojos", ie, nit-killer

  • @iquitos46
    @iquitos46 9 месяцев назад +2

    It's fascinating to learn how people who are dedicated to their work become so enamored. Did you have a "magic moment" as a kid when you decided it was going to be dragonflies? I love them because they're flying sculptures, art on the wing, on the wind. Thanks for your work.

  • @rklein
    @rklein Год назад +10

    When I was younger in areas of Florida we called them "Mosquito Hawks" and everyone understood to respect them. Somewhere over time after many people started moving to Florida the "Dragonfly" name replaced "Mosquito Hawk" and people became terrified of them. Now pretty much everyone has no clue what they are and are told they will be attacked or bitten by them, so people actively seek to kill them. I wish we could go back to calling them "Mosquito Hawks" if for no other reason than to protect these beautiful creatures.

  • @gailierunninglynx7310
    @gailierunninglynx7310 9 месяцев назад +2

    Many Native American Tribes consider Dragonflies as carriers of their Ancestor's Souls...Dragonflies are very Sacred to me! Thanks for your enthusiastic caring for them!! Love this vid!!

  • @palantir135
    @palantir135 Год назад +15

    I love to photograph them with my macro lens.
    Year after year there are less dragonflies and damselflies as are other insects.

  • @lethalwolf7455
    @lethalwolf7455 3 месяца назад +1

    They are smart creatures. Whenever I get my lawnmower out they swarm the yard knowing it’s feeding time. They are beautiful

  • @Blake_61636
    @Blake_61636 Год назад +18

    I absolutely love dragonflies 💞 Thank you for this episode

  • @trinacogitating4532
    @trinacogitating4532 Год назад +3

    I live in a suburb of Kansas City, in a 3rd-floor apartment. Was happily surprised to see, one day, multiple dragonflies had flown past my balcony. I didn't notice until later - had been taking photos of thunderstorm clouds. Looking at the pics, there were a few dragonflies, flying past! I had no idea they ever flew so high above ground level.

  • @Dhi-fe5eu
    @Dhi-fe5eu 5 месяцев назад +1

    Occasionally I see a couple of dragonflies every weekend. Never seen one catch a fly yet. But it’s nice to know that they do catch flys. Great video. I learned a lot.

  • @2MuchPurple
    @2MuchPurple Год назад +7

    I've always loved them. Magical creatures!

  • @usnchief1339
    @usnchief1339 6 месяцев назад +1

    I was admiring a dragonfly hunting a couple of days ago. Your video answered many of the questions I had. Thank you.

  • @Kaice88
    @Kaice88 Год назад +6

    dragonflies are just so cool. Definitely my fav flying insect! I can stare at them for hours. what a fun video! i learned so much!

  • @HurricaneTroy
    @HurricaneTroy Год назад +9

    Yesssssssssssssssss Dragonflies are so so so awesome

  • @chaugg1
    @chaugg1 Год назад +26

    Thank you for this topic!
    Please more on other insect topics. 🎉

  • @kthfox
    @kthfox Год назад +9

    I am so jealous of that dragonfly pin.

  • @thebourgeoispunk
    @thebourgeoispunk Год назад +5

    8:46 That shot with the frog trying to eat the dragonfly was incredible

  • @Kimmysensation
    @Kimmysensation 5 месяцев назад +4

    They work smarter… not harder!!!! ❤❤❤

  • @PurpleRhymesWithOrange
    @PurpleRhymesWithOrange Год назад +7

    Dragonflies are a good omen. They ward off minor annoyances to help you focus on your quest.

  • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
    @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 4 месяца назад +1

    Sometimes I’m followed by dragonflies while biking and I feel honored. They seem to symbolize transformation

  • @pattimiller9157
    @pattimiller9157 Год назад +9

    I love dragonfly since I was a kid I thought of them as mini helicopter ❤

  • @AuntieMamies
    @AuntieMamies 5 месяцев назад +1

    I've always loved dragonflies. I love that they're born in still, murky water and they grow into these beautiful, amazing creatures. They're a symbol of change for the better even if by nature you begin in unfavorable conditions

  • @ryno_b
    @ryno_b Год назад +4

    Awesome work Dr. Ware!! 🙌

  • @Knucklehead123
    @Knucklehead123 8 месяцев назад +4

    Don't know any dragonfly lore per se - however - in a friend's flowering garden - the SAME dragonfly came and sat on his shoulder day after day - would look at him, at me - we would talk to it and it would hang around for a while and then leave. Uncanny.

  • @jakerubino3233
    @jakerubino3233 Год назад +12

    Always been one of my favourite creatures. A flawless predator with super abilities. We occasionally get massive swarms of them in Adelaide where I live. Never realised they actually did swarm until the first time I saw it. Amazing.

    • @kellymalone6798
      @kellymalone6798 Год назад +2

      I used to have swarms at my old house. Brown and blue dragonflies. Happened every year.

  • @andrelabonte2294
    @andrelabonte2294 5 месяцев назад +2

    I live in the Bancroft Ontario area and love the dragon flies. They’re my best friend during fly season.👍☮️🇨🇦

  • @kforest2745
    @kforest2745 Год назад +3

    These two minds are awesome glad to hear them

  • @richardlopez2932
    @richardlopez2932 4 месяца назад

    I watched a ton of these during the pandemic and I felt like I got 10x as much as any year of community college. You can really teach yourself anything with the right questions.

  • @eveorlando3389
    @eveorlando3389 10 месяцев назад +3

    I love dragonflies! This made me happy.
    A few years ago, I was looking for a book to learn more about dragonflies.Unfortunatey, I was unable to find one.

  • @thechancellor3715
    @thechancellor3715 4 месяца назад

    Glad to have this video recommended
    There's a nearby Izaac Walton pond with a creek running along one side, wealth of dragon flies and some beautiful turqoise damsel flies. Joy to just watch them.
    Thank you!

  • @clivematthews95
    @clivematthews95 Год назад +6

    I love what I learned here 🙏🏾☺️

  • @pauljessome5718
    @pauljessome5718 4 месяца назад +1

    We live in eastern Ontario and dragon flies are numerous. I love them as they are beautiful
    Are great hunters and can turn on a dime.

  • @clayz1
    @clayz1 Год назад +5

    Dragonfly's seem almost friendly or intelligent. I wonder what communication could be like.

  • @vsznry
    @vsznry 11 месяцев назад +1

    The Ornithopters of DUNE were designed with the individual Dragon fly wings maneuverability in mind.

  • @Angel_Bob_
    @Angel_Bob_ Год назад +13

    Love me some excellent Dragonfly content, very well done ya'll

  • @amicaaranearum
    @amicaaranearum Год назад +5

    I love watching dragonfly aerobatics.

  • @Zeebez
    @Zeebez Год назад +7

    Love it! I want to bug out and I’m stoked on dragonflies ❤❤❤ great video. And vibes❤

  • @chance1986
    @chance1986 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wonderful video. I've always loved dragonflies. I learned a lot from this. Thank you.

  • @Anonymous-m9f9j
    @Anonymous-m9f9j Год назад +6

    Omg I love this presenter I could learn all day

  • @AdventureVanMan69
    @AdventureVanMan69 Год назад +2

    I was on a kayak trip heading down the Wisconsin river. It was hot and full of mosquitos. Within a few minutes of getting eaten alive, the dragonflies appeared. I felt and heard them near my ears as they feasted on mosquitos. It was quite an experience!

  • @ayl75057
    @ayl75057 5 месяцев назад +1

    I recently saw a damselfly underwater depositing it’s eggs on a submerged aquatic plant. It reminded me of the immensely complex life cycle of these and how dependant they are of both air and water conditions.

  • @ivanabah2237
    @ivanabah2237 Год назад +4

    My Nigerian brothers doing SCIENCE!. much love from Home

  • @moonwatche99
    @moonwatche99 5 месяцев назад

    I'm 56, and since I was very young I have always had a very fun connection with dragonflies. I'm not exactly sure why, they must be my spirit animal/bug, lol, but we LOVE each other. They are obsessed with me and I'm obsessed with them. Anywhere I've ever been or ever go where there are dragonflies, they find me and we can sit together for hours. They sit right next to me, observe me, pose, show me their wings, fight over who gets to sit closest to me, examine my face, and it can go on forever like that. 😄 😍 They are incredible for sure, amazing little creatures. 💞

  • @jodywho6696
    @jodywho6696 Год назад +5

    Simply the best. Better than all the rest. ✨

  • @rawzpfeiffer5521
    @rawzpfeiffer5521 6 месяцев назад +2

    I believe our home is in the midst of a dragonfly breeding ground. Every summer, in August, "they" fly around and around our house and several years ago, there were hundreds if them in our front yard flying in circles and back and forth. I went and stood in the middle of the flight...it was amazing!

  • @AifDaimon
    @AifDaimon Год назад +8

    The OG fliers, literally

    • @PeppoMusic
      @PeppoMusic Год назад

      Pterygota, or mayflies, is order of flyers from the Silurian and Devonian has some older fossils than of meganeurids, apparently, up to am estimated 440 million years ago, that is more than a hundred million years earlier! (I was also surprised, thought the same as you).
      But still, that is one "that we know of".
      Insects, especially with softer and lighter exoskeletons sadly do not fossilize very well. So it is very scarce, especially that far back. From most we even only have fragments of wings.
      But it also seems more likely that flight would probably have started with a much smaller insect rather than the more massive and specialized Odonata.
      Also, they would require their niche (hunting other flying insects) to exist before being able to evolve into that niche of course.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Год назад +1

      It's hilarious they talk about their evolution when they appeared in a geological instant with all their biological structures clearly no evolution producing anything about them. It's amazing how tax dollars is paying to push a pseudo science naturalist atheistic narrative in the year 2023 that goes against the science, logic and reason that an educational channel should be based on.

    • @pbsterra
      @pbsterra  Год назад +2

      The term you used, Pterygota, refers to the winged insects. Within the Pterygota is the order Ephemeroptera, or the mayflies. They form a natural group, or clade, with the Odonata, or dragonflies & damselflies; this sister group relationship is called the Palaeoptera and it is sometimes recovered as sister to the rest of the Neoptera, or remaining winged insects. Other phylogenies recover Odonata as sister to the rest of the winged insects, with Ephemeroptera sister to the Neoptera. Regardless of the hypothesis (Palaeoptera, Metapterygota or Chiastomyaria), the reason we think the first to fly were insects that looked something like a dragonfly is because in our tree of life of insects they are recovered at the base of tree. Yes, probably the first flying odonates may not have been as large as Meganeura to begin with (in that weird time between basal hexapods and when flight evolved it was likely something smaller) but it probably looked a lot like a dragonfly, a mayfly, or their common ancestor, should Palaeoptera be the correct hypothesis. There are older non-winged fossils of basal hexapods that are very old, but these probably resembled something like a silverfish or firebrat and they could not fly. - Jessica, entomologist & Insectarium host

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Год назад

      @@pbsterra Why you ignoring my comment and hiding it? You push pseudo science then are pathetic enough to hide people who point it out. That is unreal for a publicly funded channel to silence free speech and push pseudo science pbs. You should be ashamed of yourself.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Год назад

      @@pbsterra still waiting pbs why are you so pathetic?

  • @ancientheart2532
    @ancientheart2532 Год назад +1

    I was kayaking once, and this female dragonfly got down into my boat where she tried to oviposit in my bare leg numerous times. Interesting feeling.

  • @goodnatureart
    @goodnatureart Год назад +3

    Wonderful teaching!

  • @LibertyScott-x6i
    @LibertyScott-x6i 11 месяцев назад +1

    As a child I imagined dragon flys as large as birds. I was hysterical when one chased me- when kids are little- little things look ginormous.
    Love seeing them fly in the summer.

  • @1utube01
    @1utube01 Год назад +4

    My 2 favorite insects are the dragonfly and the mantis. Next are the pollinating bees.

  • @scooterscottii
    @scooterscottii 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the fascinating video. I’ve always loved dragonflies