List of Odonata species of Great Britain

There are 57 recorded species of Odonata in Britain, made up of 21 damselflies (suborder Zygoptera) and 36 dragonflies (suborder Anisoptera). Of these, 42 species (17 damselflies and 25 dragonflies) are resident breeders, and the remainder are either extinct species, or vagrants - in respect of the latter, this list follows the decisions of the Odonata Records Committee.

Some of these rare species have not been seen since the 19th Century; however, the British Odonata list is also currently undergoing a period of unprecedented change, as new species are being discovered for the first time, some going on to become breeding species.

This list is based on the following principal references:

  • Merritt, R., N. W. Moore and B. C. Eversham (1996), Atlas of the dragonflies of Britain and Ireland, HMSO (ISBN 0-11-701561-X)[1]
  • Parr, A. J. (1996), Dragonfly movement and migration in Britain and Ireland, Journal of the British Dragonfly Society Vol. 12 No. 2 pp. 33–50[2]
  • Parr, Adrian (2000a), An Annotated List of the Odonata of Britain and Ireland, Atropos No. 11 pp. 10–20[3]

A number of other references were used to provide information on specific topics, including rare vagrants, post-1990 additions, predictions, species claimed but not accepted/species of uncertain provenance, non-natives, taxonomic matters and species found only in the Channel Islands.

Ireland's Odonata fauna is quite different from that of Britain, with many fewer breeding species, but one additional species not found in Britain, Irish Damselfly Coenagrion lunulatum – see List of Odonata species of Ireland for more information.

New species since 1990

After a period in which the British Odonata list has been relatively static, since 1990, many new species have been found and some have gone on to become regular breeding species. In chronological order of their first record, these new species are:

Many British Odonata enthusiasts expect further species to be added to the list in the near future. The list below is up to date as of the end of the 2005 breeding season.

Extinct species and casual breeders

While most species on the list below are either extant established breeding species or rare vagrants, some do not fall into these two categories. The following species bred in the past but are now extinct:

The following species are sporadic or casual breeders:

  • Yellow-winged darter – this species has a pattern of establishing small breeding colonies following influxes, but none of these have become permanently established
  • Red-veined darter – following influxes in previous years, this species, like the yellow-winged darter, has formed temporary breeding colonies. However, since the mid-1990s, the number of these colonies has increased and many have continued to be present from year-to-year, so this species is now better regarded as a successful colonist.

Non-native introductions

Records of non-native Odonata species in Britain have been confined to individuals found within heated greenhouses associated with nurseries for aquatic plants. None of these species have been recorded in wild situations or gone on to establish populations in the wild. Details of species which have occurred in such circumstances can be found in Agassiz 1981,[17] Brooks 1988,[18] and Parr 2000a.[3]

The list

The list is in taxonomic order. The English name of each species is given, followed by its scientific name, details of the range countries for each breeding species, and an overall status code for species which are not long-established extant breeding species.

The following abbreviations are used to give country-by-country distribution information for the breeding species:

  • Eng to indicate that the species' breeding range includes England
  • Scot to indicate that the species' breeding range includes Scotland
  • Wales to indicate that the species' breeding range includes Wales

The following codes are used to give status details for those species which are not long-established extant breeding species:

  • Ex to indicate a former breeding species, now extinct in Britain (with the year of the last record in brackets)
  • RC to indicate that the species is a recent (i.e. post-1990) colonist (with the year of the first British record in brackets, except for Red-veined Darter which has occurred as a migrant and sporadic breeder for many decades)
  • V to indicate a species only recorded as a vagrant (with the year of the first record in brackets, except for species with long histories as visitors to Britain)

Suborder Zygoptera (damselflies)

Family Calopterygidae (demoiselles)

Banded demoiselle
Beautiful demoiselle
SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Banded demoiselleCalopteryx splendensEng/Scot/Wales
Beautiful demoiselleCalopteryx virgoEng/Scot/Wales

Family Lestidae (emerald damselflies)

SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Willow emerald damselfly[A]Chalcolestes viridisV (1899)

RC (2007)

Scarce emerald damselflyLestes dryasEng
Emerald damselflyLestes sponsaEng/Scot/Wales
Southern emerald damselflyLestes barbarusEngV (2002)
Common winter damselflySympecma fuscaV (2008)

Family Coenagrionidae (blue, blue-tailed, and red damselflies)

Azure damselfly male
Small red damselfly
Large red damselfly male
Red-eyed damselfly male
Blue-tailed damselfly female
SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Small red damselflyCeriagrion tenellumEng/Wales
Norfolk damselflyCoenagrion armatumEx (1957)
Northern damselflyCoenagrion hastulatumScot
Southern damselflyCoenagrion mercurialeEng/Wales
Azure damselflyCoenagrion puellaEng/Scot/Wales
Variable damselflyCoenagrion pulchellumEng/Scot/Wales
Dainty damselflyCoenagrion scitulumEngRC (2010)
Common blue damselflyEnallagma cyathigerumEng/Scot/Wales
Red-eyed damselflyErythromma najasEng/Wales
Small red-eyed damselflyErythromma viridulumEngRC (1999)
Blue-tailed damselflyIschnura elegansEng/Scot/Wales
Scarce blue-tailed damselflyIschnura pumilioEng/Wales
Large red damselflyPyrrhosoma nymphulaEng/Scot/Wales

Family Platycnemididae (white-legged damselflies)

SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
White-legged damselflyPlatycnemis pennipesEng/Wales

Suborder Anisoptera (dragonflies)

Family Gomphidae (club-tailed dragonflies)

SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus Code
Common clubtail[B]Gomphus vulgatissimusEng/Wales
Yellow-legged dragonfly[C]Gomphus flavipesV (1818)

Family Aeshnidae (hawkers and emperors)

Common hawker
SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Southern hawkerAeshna cyaneaEng/Scot/Wales
Brown hawkerAeshna grandisEng/Wales
Norfolk hawkerAeshna isoscelesEng[K]
Azure hawkerAeshna caeruleaScot
Common hawkerAeshna junceaEng/Scot/Wales
Migrant hawkerAeshna mixtaEng/Wales
Southern migrant hawker[D]Aeshna affinisV (1952)

?RC (2012)

EmperorAnax imperatorEng/Wales
Lesser emperorAnax parthenopeEngRC (1996)
Green darnerAnax juniusV (1998)
Hairy dragonflyBrachytron pratenseEng/Scot/Wales
Vagrant emperor[E]Hemianax ephippigerV (1903)

Family Cordulegastridae (golden-ringed dragonflies)

Golden-ringed dragonfly
SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Golden-ringed dragonflyCordulegaster boltoniiEng/Scot/Wales

Family Corduliidae (emerald dragonflies)

SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Downy emeraldCordulia aeneaEng/Scot/Wales
Brilliant emeraldSomatochlora metallicaEng/Scot
Yellow-spotted emeraldSomatochlora flavomaculataV (2018)
Northern emeraldSomatochlora arcticaScot
Orange-spotted emeraldOxygastra curtisiiEx (1963)

Family Libellulidae (chasers, skimmers, and darters)

Broad-bodied chaser
Four-spotted chaser
Black-tailed skimmer
Common darter
SpeciesScientific nameRange countriesStatus code
Broad-bodied chaserLibellula depressaEng/Wales
Scarce chaserLibellula fulvaEng
Four-spotted chaserLibellula quadrimaculataEng/Scot/Wales
Black-tailed skimmerOrthetrum cancellatumEng/Wales
Keeled skimmerOrthetrum coerulescensEng/Scot/Wales
Scarlet dragonflyCrocothemis erythraeaV (1995)
Black darterSympetrum danaeEng/Scot/Wales
Yellow-winged darter[F]Sympetrum flaveolumV
Red-veined darterSympetrum fonscolombeiEngRC
Ruddy darterSympetrum sanguineumEng/Wales
Common darter[G]Sympetrum striolatumEng/Scot/Wales
Highland darter[G]Sympetrum striolatum nigrescensScot
Vagrant darterSympetrum vulgatumV
Banded darterSympetrum pedemontanumV (1995)
White-faced darterLeucorrhinia dubiaEng/Scot/Wales
Large white-faced darter[H]Leucorrhinia pectoralisV (1859)
Wandering glider[I][J]Pantala flavescensV (1823)

Notes

A Willow emerald damselfly, since 2007 this species is established and spreading in south-east England, especially Suffolk and Essex. It was previously only known from a single record from Hertfordshire in 1899 (although this record is based on a specimen regarded by some as perhaps not of British origin, see Gladwin 1997[19]) and a single exuvia collected in Kent in 1992 (Brook & Brook 2002,[20] 2004[21]).
B Common clubtail was formerly known as club-tailed dragonfly.
C Yellow-legged dragonfly is known from just a single record, in Sussex in 1818.
D Southern migrant hawker was known from just a single record, in Kent in 1952, although an Aeshna seen in 1992 on the outskirts of Bristol may have been this species (Holmes 1993[22]), and the species has been recorded twice in Jersey since 1998 (Long 2000,[23] Parr 2005[24]). However in 2006 four specimens were seen: In the Adur valley in West Sussex on 13 July website of reporter with photo; Grimstone Warren, Norfolk on 21 July; Little Wootton Inclosure New Forest (SZ 227 987) on 6 August; And at the mouth of the Beaulieu River in Hampshire on 10 August. Since 2012 it has probably become established as a breeding species in the Thames Estuary area.
E Vagrant emperor records taken from Silsby (1993).[25]
F Yellow-winged darter is listed as a vagrant, but is occasionally subject to large influxes e.g. in 1995.
G Highland darter and common darter may be conspecific (see Merritt & Vick 1983[26]).
H Large white-faced darter has been recorded only once, at Sheerness, Kent in 1859.
I Wandering glider has been recorded only three times – at Horning, Norfolk in 1823, Bolton, Lancashire in 1951 and in Kent in 1989, although the two 20th Century records may result from accidental introductions.
J Wandering glider was formerly known as globe skimmer.
K Habitat limited to Eastern England and particularly East Anglia.

Rejected species, species of uncertain provenance, predictions and Channel Islands species

1. The following species have been claimed but not accepted by the Odonata Records Committee:

2. The following species have been recorded, and their identification accepted, but the circumstances surrounding the records and/or specimens cast doubt on their natural occurrence, and they are not included in the official British list:

  • Blue dasher (Pachydiplax longipennis), which was found dead on the Sedco 706 oil rig in the North Sea off the Shetland Isles in early September 1999 (Parr 2000b[28]). It was not accepted as the species is not a strong migrant and the rig receives weekly supplies from Texas.
  • Alpine emerald (Somatochlora alpestris), only known from a single specimen labelled as having been collected by K. J. Morton in Inverness in 1926; however Morton was travelling in continental Europe on the date in question.

3. The following is a list of species which have previously been predicted to occur in Britain but have not yet been recorded (see Merritt, Moore & Eversham 1996[1] pp. 113–114 and Parr 1998,[29] 1999[30]): subarctic darner (Aeshna subarctica), northern white-faced darter (Leucorrhina rubicunda) and small emerald damselfly (Lestes virens).

4. In addition to the species listed above, southern skimmer (Orthetrum brunneum) and southern darter (Sympetrum meridionale) have been recorded in the Channel Islands (Parr 2000a).[3]

References

External links