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Lyre-Tipped Spreadwing - Bugging You - ERCA Traditional Cache

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barnsaw: Removed. Thanks to all who visited.

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Hidden : 9/26/2011
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

This set of caches (Bugging you) will highlight some of the insects you find in the greenway and surrounding area. Be prepared for a little bushwhacking.


Adult- This is a large damselfly 1 ¼ to 1 ¾ inches (30 to 41 mm) long. The build is slender with short wings in proportion to the length of the abdomen. Both the males and females are mostly bronzy-green on the upper surface of the thorax and abdomen. The lower pair of anal appendages is "S"shaped with the tips pointing outwards when viewed from above.

Range: This species is found across North America from southern British Columbia east to Nova Scotia and south to New Jersey, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and California. In Idaho it is found throughout the state.

Habitat: This damselfly is found at ponds that are exposed to the sun, and it seems to prefer ponds that dry up in the summer. The naiads do well in alkaline water.

Adult Flight Season: June 30 to August 27

Diet: Adult- The damselfly eats a wide variety of small soft-bodied flying insects, such as mosquitoes, mayflies, flies and small moths.

Reproduction: After males and females mate, the female Lyre-tipped Spreadwing lays eggs well above the waterline on vegetation that grows out of water. Where populations are extremely dense they can actually damage the plants on which they lay their eggs.

Additional Hints (No hints available.)