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The azure damselfly (Coenagrion puella) is a species of damselfly found in most of Europe. It is notable for its distinctive black and blue colouring. It is notable for its distinctive black and blue colouring.
Irish damselfly (Irish bluet) – Coenagrion lunulatum. The common name comes from the fact that it is found in Ireland but not in Britain. Azure damselfly (azure bluet) – Coenagrion puella; Variable damselfly (variable bluet) – Coenagrion pulchellum; Common blue damselfly (common bluet) – Enallagma cyathigerum
Coenagrion puella (Linnaeus, 1758) – Azure Damselfly [4] Coenagrion pulchellum (Van der Linden, 1823) – Variable Damselfly [4] Coenagrion resolutum (Hagen in Selys, 1876) – Taiga Bluet [9] Coenagrion scitulum (Rambur, 1842) – Dainty Damselfly, [4] Dainty Bluet [11] Coenagrion syriacum (Morton, 1924) – Syrian Bluet [12] Coenagrion ...
Enallagma aspersum, the azure bluet, is a species of narrow-winged damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae. [2] [3] [4] [5] It is found in North America (Canada and ...
Amphiallagma parvum, [2] the little blue or azure dartlet, [3] [4] is a species of damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae, the sole species of the genus Amphiallagma. This species can be found in many South Asian countries including India , Sri Lanka , Myanmar , Thailand , Nepal , and probably in Bangladesh .
Diphlebia coerulescens, known as the sapphire rockmaster, [3] is an Australian species of broad winged damselfly. [4] It is one of a group known as the azure damselflies. It is found in Queensland and north-eastern New South Wales in eastern Australia, where it is found in fast-flowing streams and rivers. [3]
Common blue damselfly, Enallagma cyathigerum; Blue-tailed damselfly, Ischnura elegans; Large red damselfly, Pyrrhosoma nymphula; Emerald damselfly, Lestes sponsa; Azure damselfly, Coenagrion puella - thought extinct as it was recorded in just two years from Poyll Dhooie, Ramsey but refound at Ballaugh Plantation/Glen Shoggle on 10 June 2023. [1]
Norfolk damselfly – only ever known from the Norfolk Broads between 1902 and 1957 Orange-spotted emerald – only ever known from two areas in southern England, one around the River Stour and Moors River in east Dorset , where the species was recorded from 1820 to 1963, and the other on the River Tamar in Devon where the species was recorded ...