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The 2008 DSA Annual Meeting, by Josh Vlach ISSN 1061-8503 TheA News Journalrgia of the Dragonfly Society of the Americas Volume 20 1 October 2008 Number 3 Published by the Dragonfly Society of the Americas ARGIA Vol. 20, No. 3, 1 October 2008 In This Issue .................................................................................................................................................................1 The 2008 DSA Annual Meeting, by Josh Vlach ..........................................................................................................2 Minutes of the 2008 Annual Meeting of the Dragonfly Society of the Americas, by Steve Valley............................5 BAO Reminder ...........................................................................................................................................................6 Report on the Northeastern DSA Meeting, by William J. Nichols, Jr., Jenna R. McAdoo, Erin White and Jan Trybula ..........................................................................................................................................................7 The Modoc Experience: CalOdes/DSA Blitz IV, by Douglas Aguillard ...................................................................9 A Hybrid Complex in Enallagma, by Nick (TW) Donnelly .....................................................................................10 An Interesting Record of Bird Predation on a Darner, by Jeffrey D. Babson ..........................................................12 Cedar Waxwing (Bombycilla cedrorum) Cooperative Hunting of Celithemis elisa (Calico Pennant) Tenerals, by John and Sue Gregoire .................................................................................................................................12 Celithemis elisa (Calico Pennant) Does It Again, by Sue and John Gregoire ............................................................13 Educating New York’s Finger Lakes Visitors to Tachopteryx, by John and Sue Gregoire.........................................14 Dragonflies and Damselflies for the 2008 Season: New Records from the Texas Panhandle, Hill Country, and San Antonio, by Jerry K. Hatfield ....................................................................................................................14 Didymops and Macromia Go Walkabout: Long Distance Crawls by Odonate Larvae to Emergence Sites, by Christopher E. Hill and Amy B. Hill ................................................................................................................16 Very Unusual Gomphid Oviposition Behavior—a Consequence of Extreme Crowding?, by Nick Donnelly .......17 Pachydiplax longipennis (Blue Dasher) Flying with Exuvia Attached, by Tim Manolis and Steve Klett .................18 Spiders Residing in Odonate Exuviae—An Update and Request for Information, by Tim Manolis ....................19 Notes on the Fragile Habitat, Distribution, and Ecology of the Bleached Skimmer (Libellula composita), by Robert R. Larsen ...............................................................................................................................................19 First Arizona Record of Narrow-striped Forceptail (Aphylla protracta), by Robert A. Behrstock ..........................21 Triacanthagyna caribbea (Caribbean Darner) in Texas: Another U.S. Record, by Steve Collins .............................21 Prairie Bluet (Coenagrion angulatum): A New Record for Alaska with Notes on its Habitat and Other Odonate Species Found Near Kanuti Lake, Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge, by John Hudson and Lisa Saperstein ..........................................................................................................................................................22 Corkscrew Crystals!, by Jerrell J. Daigle ....................................................................................................................25 Dythemis velox (Swift Setwing) in Indiana, by Bill Mauffray ...................................................................................26 Tauriphila argo (Arch-tipped Glider)—New Species for the United States, by Fabrice de Lacour .........................26 Dragonfly vs. Shrew ..................................................................................................................................................27 Want Some Buttons?.................................................................................................................................................27 A Significant New Hine’s Emerald (Somatochlora hineana) Record for Michigan, by Ryne Rutherford and Mark O’Brien ...................................................................................................................................................28 Recent Articles and Books ........................................................................................................................................29 Book Review: Gossamer Wings, Mysterious Dragonflies, reviewed by Kathy Biggs ..............................................29 erronea, a poem by Sue Gregoire ...............................................................................................................................31 Front cover: Triacanthagyna caribbea (Caribbean Darner), a new species for the U.S. at Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, Hidalgo Co., Texas on 13 November 2007. Photo by Steve Collins. ARGIA — The News Journal of the D.S.A. In This Issue I started the last issue off with a statement about this year ter Lake National Wildlife Refuge in southeastern New being one for the record books in the lower Rio Grande Mexico, where Robert passionately studies odonates. Valley of Texas. Well, things have certainly not slowed down there as those of you that follow Tex-Odes have There are several interesting articles on exuviae and larval no doubt read. Several of the species found there that are emergence in this issue. Tim Manolis tells us more about new for North America now have official common names. spiders living in exuviae and along with Steve Klett, docu- These names are Triacanthagyna caribbea (Caribbean ments an exuvia attached to an adult Pachydiplax longipennis Darner), Planiplax sanguiniventris (Mexican Scarlet-tail), (Blue Dasher). I wonder how often something like that and Tauriphila argo (Arch-tipped Glider). happens. Chris and Amy Hill detail the distances that mac- romiids will travel to emerge. We should be keeping our In this issue we have reports on several successful meetings eyes out for exuviae well away from the water’s edge! this summer, including the annual DSA meeting in Bend, Oregon, the Northeastern DSA meeting in Malone, New There are a bunch of new records in this issue. Robert York, and the fourth annual CalOdes/DSA Blitz, which Behrstock documents the first Aphylla protracta (Narr- was held at Modoc National Wildlife Refuge. row-striped Forceptail) for Arizona. Steve Collins reports Triacanthagyna caribbea (Caribbean Darner) for the first Nick Donnelly provided two interesting notes for this time in the U.S. from the lower Rio Grande Valley of south- issue. In the first, Nick discusses several of the known ern Texas. He photographed this species there last year and Enallagma hybrids and adds evidence of a new one it has been seen there repeatedly in September of this year. between carunculatum (Tule Bluet) and civile (Familiar This is certainly not the only new species to show up in Bluet). In the second, he describes an observation from south Texas this year though. Fabrice de Lacour shares his the recent Bend meeting that must have been truly spec- and Ed Lam’s discovery of Tauriphila argo (Arch-tipped tacular. I heard from several attendees about the incredible Glider), also new to the U.S., in south Texas. numbers of Octogomphus specularis (Grappletail) that were observed along the outlet stream of Gold Lake. Jerrell Daigle reports on the latest findings of Chrysobasis lucifer (Lucifer Damsel) at the Audubon Corkscrew We have two stories of bird predation on dragonflies in Swamp Sanctuary in Florida. Ryne Rutherford and Mark this issue. The first, by Jeffrey Babson, details an account O’Brien report a significant range extension of the Hine’s of a Sulpur-bellied Flycatcher feeding on a darner. The Emerald (Somatochlora hinei) in Michigan. And Bill second, by John and Sue Gregoire, involves cooperative Mauffray reports Dythemis velox (Swift Setwing) from hunting of Celithemis elisa (Calico Pennant) by Cedar Indiana for the first time. Waxwings. This has been such a “hot” summer for odonates that they The Gregoires update us with this year’s mass emergence are even making new discoveries in the far north of Alaska. of Celithemis elisa around the sanctuary pond they have John Hudson and Lisa Saperstein report Coenagrion been studying in the Finger Lake region of New York. angulatum (Prairie Bluet) for the first time from that They also proposed and helped design some new trail head state. signs at Glen Gorge. One of these signs talks about the Tachopteryx thoreyi (Gray Petaltail) and its propensity to land on the casual observer. They’ve included a photo of Mark Your Calendar this new sign and if you look carefully, you might recog- nize someone. The 6th Worldwide Dragonfly Association Inter- national Congress of Odonatology will be held in Jerry Hatfield has been at it again and documents a num- Xalapa, Mexico, 7–12 June 2009. For more informa- ber of new county records from the Texas Panhandle tion see <http://www.ecologia.unam.mx/odonatol- and the central Texas area. Robert
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