When the National Weather Service’s Cleveland location tweeted out a video in September showing some huge clouds of purple, teal, and green moving across Ohio, Western Pennsylvania, and Indiana, the ...
Dragonflies are known to swarm, but it's not exactly clear why. An influx of dragonflies are swarming parts of the U.S. at such an intense pace they are being picked up on radars across three states, ...
Scary footage captured the moment a swarm of supersized dragonflies engulfed a Rhode Island beach over the weekend. The endless swarm of large insects was seen descending on Misquamicut Beach in ...
I don’t like being a dinner plate. That is exactly what I became while hiking recently in Utah’s Wasatch Mountains just east of Salt Lake City. I was minding my own business when a very large ...
"Cover your mouth, cover your mouth!" shouted my sister Donna as I did my best one-armed sprint across the lush green meadow toward the pavilion where my parents, aunt and uncle awaited us with big ...
"They are unbelievably numerous this year," said Allen Barlow, an aquatic biologist and author of the "Field Guide to Dragonflies and Damselflies of New Jersey." "You have two very specialized species ...
Late summer brings peak season for many of Wisconsin’s dragonfly and damselfly species. Depending upon the species, dragonflies and damselflies have peak flight seasons at different times during ...
The Japanese trap dragonflies with weighted silk threads because they treasure their association with the virtues of happiness, courage, and... Apr 09, 2015 — The Japanese trap dragonflies with ...
JERSEY SHORE — Swarms of dragonflies not seen in years are flitting throughout New Jersey, and in spectacular numbers on the Shore's salt marshes — where they are busily devouring squadrons of ...
STAUNTON, Va. – Last week, meteorologists in Ohio spotted something unexpected on the radar – a swarm of migrating dragonflies. Dragonfly swarms have been reported in Virginia and other nearby states.
A German RC robot flies just like the real thing did 300 million years ago. And it’s as big as your arm. So it’s a good thing that the dragonflies we encounter today are rarely bigger than a Reese’s ...
"They are unbelievably numerous this year," said Allen Barlow, an aquatic biologist and author of the "Field Guide to Dragonflies and Damselflies of New Jersey." "You have two very specialized species ...