CONTACT
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Mail :
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Nature Conservation Dept. of Development Plymouth City Council Plymouth PL1 2AA |
| 01752 304229 | |
| wildlife@plymouth.gov.uk |
LINKS
- Devon Biodiversity Records Centre
- The Bat Conservation Trust
- Butterfly Conservation
- The Mammal Society
- Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
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Beautiful Demoiselle, Calopteryx virgo
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Size
Small to medium sized; body length 30mm to 40mm.
Colour-patterning
Males are a resplendent metallic blue-green. Their wings are tinted deep blue and lack a stigma. Females are a metallic greenish-bronze with brown tinted wings, each with a conspicuous white stigma.
Behaviour
Demoiselles flutter rather than fly. Males take up prominent perches along their breeding territory to display and only leave them to make short forays to ward off intruders. If the intruder is a smaller damselfly or even a butterfly, they will simply flash their wings to deter the intruder rather than fly after them. Several males will attempt to court a female in elaborate chases with the winner eventually displaying to her by energetically fluttering his wings in front of her. Eggs are laid into submerged vegetation by the female.
Where to look for it
Demoiselles prefer moderate to fast-running streams. They are commonly to be seen in Efford Marsh and Forder Valley Local Nature Reserves but are also readily seen by the stream in Newnham Public Open Space and along much of the length of the Tory Brook.

Distribution and status
Common wherever there is suitable habitat.
When to look for it
Mid May to early September.

Similar species
The combination of metallic colouration and smoky wings make this species unmistakeable.

