Many of the snaketail dragons are fairly rare. A couple types like the St Croix and Sioux snaketailes have only been discovered in the past decade and have only been found in small numbers. The main reason is that many of the snaketail nymphs are susceptible to water pollution and contaminants. Since most burrow in the sand at the bottom of the stream or river they can only be affected by river erosion and the depositing of silt on the bottom of the river.
This particular snaketail is the rusty snaketail, Ophiogomphus rupinsulensis. This is one of the more common snaketails that does not seem to be as affected by the river conditions as many others of the genus are. It is a mature male that was perched on a rock in the rapids of the Sunrise River where it empties into the St Croix River in Wild River State Park.
7 comments:
Great photos, hard to to enjoy one of these guys. Got photos of one many years ago myself.
This is my first time to see this kind of tail. Happy Monday!
MM-cheese cake
Just love your photos on the dragon flies !!!
really great shot!
great macrophotography. i should get a macro lens soon :)
How very interesting about the clubtails. I learned something new today....a few somethings. Thanks for the information accompanying such delightful pictures! ~karen
That IS an unusual looking dragonfly! And it's easy to see why it's called a 'snake tail'. Very, very pretty - and gorgeous photos as usual. :)
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