• About
    • About WDA
    • Board of Trustees
    • Social Media Team
    • Meeting minutes
    • Glossary
    • Contact
  • Membership
    • Levels
    • Directory
    • Resources
  • Meetings
    • ICO2023
    • Past meetings
    • Future meetings
    • Other odonate meetings
  • Awards & grants
    • Past award recipients
    • Conservation & research grants
  • Resources
    • Odo-openings
    • Web resources
    • Member resources
    • About dragonflies
    • IUCN
    • Odonatological Abstracts
    • Odonate books
    • Selysia
  • Agrion
    • Agrion newsletter
  • Journal
    • International Journal of Odonatology
    • Editorial Board
    • Information
    • Instructions for Authors

Log In


Join Now | Lost Password?

Skip to content
Worldwide Dragonfly Association

Worldwide Dragonfly Association

International organization dedicated to dragonflies

  • Log In
  • Register
  • About
    • About WDA
    • Board of Trustees
    • Social Media Team
    • Meeting minutes
    • Glossary
    • Contact
  • Membership
    • Levels
    • Directory
    • Resources
  • Meetings
    • ICO2023
    • Past meetings
    • Future meetings
    • Other odonate meetings
  • Awards & grants
    • Past award recipients
    • Conservation & research grants
  • Resources
    • Odo-openings
    • Web resources
    • Member resources
    • About dragonflies
    • IUCN
    • Odonatological Abstracts
    • Odonate books
    • Selysia
  • Agrion
    • Agrion newsletter
  • Journal
    • International Journal of Odonatology
    • Editorial Board
    • Information
    • Instructions for Authors

Archives: Articles

The first recorded arrival of Anax junius, Drury (Anisoptera: Aeshnidae) in Europe: A scientist’s perspective

In September and October 1998 adults of Anax junius, (Common Green Darner) were encountered in small numbers at coastal sites in southwestern U.K. Circumstantial evidence supports the inference that they reached there on winds originating from New Brunswick and Quebec Canada in early September, a time when this species regularly migrates southwards along the Atlantic…

Volume 26

← Browse all issues

Also in this issue

Territorial males have larger wing spots than non-territorial males in the damselfly Calopteryx splendens (Zygoptera: Calopterygidae)

A collecting trip to San José del Guaviare, Colombia, with the description of a new species of Perissolestes (Zygoptera: Perilestidae)

← Browse all issues
Agrion Newsletter
damselfly icon International Journal of Odonatology

Recent Posts

  • IUCN Redlist: over 6000 dragonfly species assessed
  • WDA to host virtual event on 15 July
  • New changes in 2021
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Help and FAQ
  • Join or renew membership
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Tools
  • Terms of Service
  • Webmaster
   

Copyright © 2021 Worldwide Dragonfly Association (Memberlite theme)

Back to Top