Dragonflies, on the other hand, look small, shiny, and cute, much like a douche in an air pocket or jewelry on clothes, and are often grouped with butterflies and ladybugs in a very brief overview of Bugs Individuals Like. But they're also voracious hunters, and new research suggests they may be the world's most ruthless compulsive animal trackers.
When you start using other flying creeps, dragonflies know how to catch their targets in the air more than 95% of the time, always burning new meat on the spike without even trying to land.
Next stage: take more food. The keel may be small, but her hunger is endless. , a dragonfly trip in Rio where you watch a wild dragonfly eat 30 flies in a row. "Fortunately, it would keep eating," "if more food was available."
In a series of ongoing works, scientists are focusing on the key moments of the dragonfly's mind, eyes and wings that allow it to hunt flawlessly. A study that never resolved showed that the dragonfly's sensory system showed near-human limitations in terms of special attention, ready to focus on solitary prey as it flew through the smoke, which also teemed with creepy crawlers, much like the visitor. in a meeting, he can take care of his partner's words while ignoring foundation chatter. Along these lines, as the keel surrounds the feast, it holds the image of moving prey in similar recognition, a similar compass point in the landscape field. Other species of swallows migrate long distances every year, still a special phenomenon similar to the recognized expedition of monarch butterflies. Recent studies have shown that green dragonflies migrate in large numbers between the northern US and southern Brazil each fall and spring, while the mundane glitter life lives up to its name: followed by migration to India and Africa, a full circle, multigenerational journey that can exceed 10,000 miles
Dragonflies migrate to expand spawning grounds to find warm freshwater pools where they can safely lay their eggs. The eggs hatch into dragonflies: formidable hunters that gobble up and shoot marine prey with their mouths for weeks to years until they're ready to spread wings, wings, and stalk the skies.
Photos by my author.
Quite the compelling and interesting writing style.
Thanks to your author for the photos!
Thank you very much indeed, that's what I try to do here, greetings.