Male. Peter's Canyon, Orange, Orange County, CA. 6-5-06
Vivid Dancer

Argia vivida

Odonata: Coenagrionidae

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Female. Santiago Oaks Regional Park, Orange, Orange County, CA. 7-14-06.
Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Young Male. Mason Park, Irvine, Orange County, CA. 07/29/07.
Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Male, immature. Irvine Park, Orange, Orange County, CA. 5-26-06
Copyright: Ron Hemberger
 

Male. Santiago Oaks Regional Park, Orange, Orange County, CA. 7-18-06.
Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Male. Santiago Oaks Regional Park, Orange, Orange County, CA. 7-18-06.
Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Male. Peter's Canyon, Orange, Orange County, CA. 6-5-06

Male. Santiago Oaks Regional Park, Orange, Orange County, CA. 7-18-06.
Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Coupling. San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh, Irvine, Orange County, CA. 8-22-05. Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Coupling. Fullerton Arboretum, Fullerton, Orange County, CA. 10-8-06.
Copyright Ron Hemberger.

Teneral. San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh, Irvine, Orange County, CA. 3-16-06. Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Teneral. Fullerton, Orange County, CA. 10-14-06. Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Teneral. Fullerton, Orange County, CA. 10-14-06. Copyright: Ron Hemberger

Teneral. Fullerton, Orange County, CA. 10-14-06. Copyright: Ron Hemberger
Damselflies have several different appearances as they mature. When they first emerge from the nymph stage, they are called tenerals and can be almost transparent (like the one shown above). With their wings not yet fully formed, they fly awkwardly to a nearby perch and rapidly begin to mature. The two photos on the left show how, in a period of just six minutes, blood has flowed into veins in the wings, thus turning the once-floppy appendages into more solid structures. The body color also darkens and becomes more vivid, particularly in older tenerals. Adult coloration is darker yet, then, as the damselflies continue to age, their colors begin to fade into softer, more subtle hues (the same is true with dragonflies).

Coenagrionid larva (species uncertain). Silverado Canyon, Orange County, CA. 04/84.
Copyright: Peter J. Bryant (pjbryant@uci.edu). Contact for originals

Coenagrionid larva (species uncertain). Silverado Canyon, Orange County, CA. 04/84.
Copyright: Peter J. Bryant (pjbryant@uci.edu). Contact for originals