These photos were taking through my home made bigascope. That is a picture taken through a pair of binoculars backwards. Trust me it works! The female in this case was a yellow version of the male. In this picture you can see the blue tail of the male coming down and gripping the female behind the head. In a couple of days she will be full of eggs and will land at the edge of the water to lay them. To do this she will have to dive under water and affix them to some aquatic plant. The nymphs of this species will then predate on the larval stages of the midge and mosquito.
So knowing what we now know about the love lives of Damselflies, how do you explain the next picture?No, you are not looking at gay Damselflies, this is in fact a male female pair. Some females attract a mate by looking like males. Sounds strange but nothing is more attractive to some male Damselflies than a female that looks like a male. Others prefer their girls in yellow, green or brown.
There were other things of interest down at Thornton. In between being buzzed by kingfishers, attacked by robins we were serenaded by a male Reed Bunting (Emberiza Schoenicius). At the time I thought it was a tree sparrow, but it wasn't. It should be busy at the moment supporting its second brood, since its first brood will have fledged by now. Maybe he hasn't found a mate this year, maybe that is why he was singing to us.
There was a couple of other surprises down at Thornton today, but I think I'll save those for a rainy day.
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