Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Double striped bluet

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Insecta

Suborder
  
Zygoptera

Scientific name
  
Enallagma basidens

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Odonata

Family
  
Coenagrionidae

Rank
  
Species

Similar
  
Orange bluet, Slender bluet, Powdered dancer, Stream bluet, Citrine forktail

The double-striped bluet (Enallagma basidens) is species of damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae. This species grows to lengths 21–28 mm. Its common name from the peculiar black shoulder stripe, which is divided in two by a thin blue stripe. This is the key identification characteristic; no other damselfly has a shoulder stripe that looks like this one.

Mature males have an abdomen that alternates black and blue. The final segment of the abdomen is blue below and black above, while segments 8 and 9 are all blue. Females and immatures are tan to olive or brown, but like the mature males they have the divided shoulder stripe.

These damselflies are most typically found alongside lakes and ponds, but are occasionally found next to slow-moving streams, too.

Distribution

  • United States: (Alabama • Arkansas • Arizona • California • Colorado • Delaware • Florida • Georgia • Iowa • Illinois • Indiana • Kansas • Kentucky • Louisiana • Maryland • Michigan • Missouri • Mississippi • Nebraska • North Carolina • New Jersey • New Mexico • Ohio • Pennsylvania • South Carolina • Tennessee • Texas • Vermont • Wisconsin • West Virginia)
  • Canada: (Ontario)
  • References

    Double-striped bluet Wikipedia