The Telegram (St. John's)

Move over crickets, dragonflie­s can forecast, too

- Chief Meteorolog­ist Cindy Day

Since weather lore is a product of decades of careful observatio­n, I love to get questions about things people notice.

Earlier this week, Paul Smith who lives in Dominion, N.S., wanted to know if there might be a connection between the unusually high number of dragonflie­s and the heat wave. He has seen as many as six to 12 of them flying around at once.

Great question Paul. Dragonflie­s, like many insects, are known to be strongly affected by changes in the weather. Dragonflie­s are exothermic, which means changes in temperatur­e influence their behaviour. They are more active when it’s warm and a little lethargic when it gets too cool.

Wind also plays a role in a dragonfly’s activity level. On very windy days, they won’t fly at all, or it will be restricted to places that are protected from the wind. While dragonflie­s are powerful fliers, they still have limitation­s. They have massive, broad, flat wings and though they have bulky bodies, they just don’t weigh that much.

Light is known to impact flight activity as well; more dragonflie­s tend to fly on sunny days than on cloudy days.

Finally, let’s consider rain. Several researcher­s have observed that dragonflie­s disappear from the water’s edge right before it starts to rain. This behaviour is fascinatin­g … and very smart.

So there you have it Paul. While this hot, windless weather has many of us scurrying indoors to our air-conditione­d homes, the dragonflie­s are having a ball!

“While dragonflie­s are powerful fliers, they still have limitation­s. They have massive, broad, flat wings and though they have bulky bodies, they just don’t weigh that much.”

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