Aeshnidae, Leach, 1815

Archibald, S. Bruce, Cannings, Robert A. & Greenwalt, Dale E., 2022, Kishenehna prima, a new genus and species of darner dragonfly (Odonata, Aeshnidae, Gomphaeschninae) from the early middle Eocene Kishenehn Formation of Montana, USA, Zootaxa 5099 (4), pp. 496-500 : 499

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5099.4.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C2244780-3616-4188-A23E-0291BD463F03

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6311085

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03ED5075-EA20-FFF2-3CCC-7D87C647FB29

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Aeshnidae
status

 

Aeshnidae View in CoL in the early Paleogene

Aeshnidae View in CoL comprise the majority of dragonflies described in the early Paleogene, see Table 1 of Archibald & Cannings (2019). They are still diverse and plentiful today, although they have been overtaken in diversity by the Libellulidae View in CoL , which appear first in the Oligocene, and the Gomphidae, which has a great diversity in the late Jurassic through mid-Cretaceous, a single species in the Ypresian (early Eocene), and then is better known beginning in the Oligocene ( Archibald & Cannings 2019).

In North America, fossil Aeshnidae View in CoL are found in the Paleocene of Alberta and North Dakota ( Wighton & Wilson 1986), the Paleocene or Eocene of Alaska ( Garrouste & Nel 2019), the Ypresian of the Okanagan Highlands ( Archibald & Cannings 2019), and the Priabonian (late Eocene) at Florissant (summarised by Meyer 2003) about 1200 kilometers to the southeast. The Gomphaeschninae is well represented in Paleocene and Eocene localities of Europe and North America ( Archibald & Cannings 2019, Table 1).

Lutetian dragonflies have only been reported from Eckfeld Maar (including Gomphaeschninae : Wappler 2003) (Grube Messel, Germany, referred to as Lutetian by Archibald & Cannings 2019 is now dated as Ypresian including the Ypresian/Lutetian boundary by Lenz et al. 2015). Bartonian dragonflies are not known. Kishenehna prima is the only dragonfly of this time known in the Western Hemisphere, increasing our scant knowledge of them in the middle Eocene.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Odonata

Family

Aeshnidae

Loc

Aeshnidae

Archibald, S. Bruce, Cannings, Robert A. & Greenwalt, Dale E. 2022
2022
Loc

Libellulidae

Rambur 1842
1842
Loc

Aeshnidae

Leach 1815
1815
Loc

Aeshnidae

Leach 1815
1815
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