Demographic Traits and Behavior of Hetaerina cruentata (Odonata: Calopterygidae) in Ecosystems of the Andean Region of Colombia

Demographic Traits and Behavior of Hetaerina cruentata (Odonata: Calopterygidae) in Ecosystems of the Andean Region of Colombia 00

María Vianney García-Monsalvea, Mariano Altamiranda-Saavedrab, Fredy Palacino Rodríguezc,d ✉️ , Adolfo Cordero-Riverae

  1. Grupo de Investigación en Ecología y Biogeografía y al laboratorio de entomología de la Universidad de Pamplona
  2. Institución Universitaria Politécnico Colombiano Jaime Isaza Cadavid, Medellín, Colombia
  3. Sección Etología, Facultad de Ciencias,Universidad de la República, Montevideo,Uruguay
  4. Research Group on Odonates and other arthropods of Colombia (GINOCO), Acarology Research Center, Bogotá, Colombia
  5. Universidade de Vigo, ECOEVO Lab, E. E. Forestal, 36005 Pontevedra, Spain

International Journal of Odonatology, Volume 24, Pages 261-273, 2021

https://doi.org/10.23797/2159-6719_24_20

Published: 5 November 2021 (Received: 4 December 2020, Accepted: 24 May 2021)

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Abstract

Demography and territorial behavior of Hetaerina cruentata was studied along three lowland streams located at Norte de Santander department in the Colombian Andean region. Adult damselflies (N: 278) were individually marked, and using their recapture histories we estimated survival, longevity, sex ratio, age groups and population size at each location. We found no evidence for survival differences between ages and sexes. However, the proportion of resighted individuals was lower for females, and the sex ratio was male-biased in all populations. Although we recorded few reproductive events, a high number of male-male agonistic interactions were registered around midday. During reproductive behavior, we observed brief wing displays as signals between males and females, and the formation of the tandem position, followed by the intra-male sperm translocation and copulation (mean duration 11.3 min). After copulation, the pair in tandem looked for suitable sites to oviposit, and then the male broke tandem and perched on the vegetation while the female laid eggs partially or completely underwater. The recapture probability was time-dependent, which suggests that the alternation of rainy and sunny days during the study may be generating differences in the demography of the three H. cruentata populations.

Keywords: dragonfly, damselfly, Zygoptera, mark-recpature, Neotropics

Issue section: Original article

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