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Fear for dragonflies prompts survey of British population

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Published Date: 21 April 2008
A NATIONWIDE survey of dragonflies is being launched this week amid concerns that a third of British species are under threat.
The winged insects have "survived the extinction of the dinosaurs and several ice ages", but are now threatened by habitat destruction and climate change, the British Dragonfly Society warned.

The society has collected data showing that 36 per cen
t of the 39 dragonfly species in the UK are in decline. Now it is launching a five-year "Dragonflies in Focus" project which aims to produce a new atlas giving a snapshot of the current locations of Britain's dragonflies.

The BDS said the atlas will be used as a baseline against which changes can be mapped, and be used to monitor endangered species and make conservation decisions. According to the society, dragonflies could be under threat from pollution, habitat loss, competition or climate change – with the majority of species appearing to be on the move.

Dragonflies are increasingly heading to Britain from Europe and even North America. When the last atlas was published in 1996, the small red-eyed damselfly had never been seen in the UK, but it now has breeding colonies from Devon to Norfolk and is still spreading.

The azure hawker, northern damselfly, southern damselfly and Norfolk hawker are among the species that are under threat. One of the dangers to the insects, which eat large quantities of mosquitoes and midges, are the introduction of non-native fish to ponds and lakes.

These new species of fish feed on dragonfly larvae, which spend up to a year growing under water.

BDS conservation officer Katharine Parkes said: "They have survived the extinction of the dinosaurs and several ice ages, but can dragonflies survive the increasing pressures imposed by mankind?

"Understanding where and how quickly our dragonflies are moving will help us plan for the future, with particular regard to the way in which conservation is carried out – it will be very important to make sure we are providing our wildlife with the best opportunities."





The full article contains 344 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 20 April 2008 9:35 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 21/04/2008 02:02:30
Just as well blaming climate change, it gets blamed for everything these days.
2

Unimpressed one,

21/04/2008 08:27:45
"The winged insects have "survived the extinction of the dinosaurs and several ice ages", but are now threatened by habitat destruction and climate change, the British Dragonfly Society warned."

In West Lothian, dragonfly populations increase when the weather's hot and dry (Globally warmer world) and decrease when it's cold and wet. Hence a hotter drier climate, as predicted for the UK at least, should be to their liking. So if it is now being claimed 'climate change' is having a detrimental effect on their survival, how does this stack up with the claims? All the usual crap.
3

Boy Wonder,

21/04/2008 08:56:16
Let's see them survive my partner's rolled-up newspaper swattings. She can't abide them! A daddy-long-legs flying near her doesn't realise it's on a kamikaze flight and it won't be going back to where it came from!
4

eyeswider,

still cold 21/04/2008 09:35:49
The fish are eating our foreign dragonfly larvae - hold the front page.

Just give us some (more) funding and we will go away.

In other news: food rioting and coups expected worldwide due to stupid(insane) policies involving pasta for petrol and tortilla diesel.

Al Gore, however, is "given" 300,000,000 dollars to "persuade" recalcitrant sceptics that the current cold prevailing worldwide (except the part of it that has hardly any weather stations - which is warming up enough to screw the whole world's average temperature if you can believe it) is not really happening and we should buy his carbon credits to save the....

This is getting tired very quickly.

5

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 21/04/2008 10:22:30
Adult Dragonflies eat flying insects. Flying insects in the UK are all declining due to the blanket applications of new 'super pesticides' like Imidacloprid on all fields of oilseed rape. In France they lost 50,000 hives of bees in just one year die to this pesticide - and the French marched on Paris and got it banned. Not here in the UK! We just love pesticides here! I would make a reasonable guess that Dragonflies are eating lots and lots of bees, butterflies, hoverflies and so on - all of which have fed in pesticide drenched fields of oilseed rape. Result? Dragonfly gets lots of small does of Imidacloprid - which adds up to a big lethal dose.
6

Fanling,

Hong Kong 23/04/2008 00:05:58
I know of one particular spot in a picturesque mountainous area of northern England where dragonflies the size of wee helicopters prevail undisturbed. And am nae tellin. Low lying river places in southern China are also favourite places to see these harmless creatures in abundance. Live and let live, eh?

 

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