Featherlight Fliers Boast Parchment-Thin Wings

Lund University

They cross oceans, glide on monsoon winds, and can appear in new places after thousands of kilometres in the air. Now a new study from Lund University shows that dragonflies are among nature's most extreme migrants - and that their journeys may help us understand climate change.

Dragonflies and damselflies are predatory insects with powerful jaws, compound eyes and spectacular colours. What is less well known is their ability, like migratory birds, to travel long distances and overcome geographically challenging barriers such as the Indian Ocean and the Alps.

The results reveal an unseen world above our heads

For a long time, scattered observations and papers have indicated migratory behaviour in a number of dragonfly species. Now, a comprehensive study of this global phenomenon has been completed. After several years of work and a review of 392 papers, the researchers have identified 100 species with documented migratory behaviour and a further 85 that are also likely to migrate. The results reveal an unseen world above our heads - where insects undertake journeys that can in some cases rival those of migratory birds.

"Many people see dragonflies as something that hovers over a forest pond for a few days in July. But some species fly across continents and open seas. It is truly staggering when you begin to grasp the scale," says researcher Johanna Hedlund at Lund University, who led the study.

A female of the migratory species globe skimmer (Pantala flavescens). Photo: Johanna Hedlund
A female of the migratory species globe skimmer (Pantala flavescens). Photo: Johanna Hedlund

The research also shows that the ability to migrate has evolved several times over the course of evolution, mainly as a way to escape cold, drought, and environments where reproduction has become impossible. Most dragonflies, like other migratory insects, complete their round-trip migration over several generations. Others do something even more unusual: they fly from their hatching sites in hot valleys up to cooler elevations in the mountains - only to return later.

"I was genuinely surprised by how many examples there are of dragonflies completing an entire migration cycle, that is, a round trip journey, within a single lifetime. That is rare in insects and, oddly enough, something research has not paid much attention to before," says Johanna Hedlund.

The researchers suggest that dragonflies can serve as guides to the vast, largely invisible mass migration of insects taking place globally. Because dragonflies are easy to recognise, they can help scientists understand how other insects move between ecosystems - from pollinating hoverflies to pests and disease vectors. Their migration routes can also reveal which environments are especially important to protect for migratory insects. In addition, dragonflies are sensitive to water quality and environmental changes, making them important indicator species.

"Dragonflies function almost like nature's own sensors. By tracking their movements and where they thrive, we can better understand how ecosystems and the climate are changing," concludes Johanna Hedlund.

Publication:

Link to the article in Biological Reviews:

Flight of the dragons: a global review of migration in Odonata

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