Last Updated on Sunday, 25 September, 2016 03:40:52 PM

 

Cratilla metallica (Brauer, 1878)

Found in Asia: Bangladesh, China, Indonesia, Myanmar, Malaysia, Philippines, Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand
 
Genus : Cratilla Super-Family: LIBELLULOIDEA Family: LIBELLULIDAE

Cratilla metallica (Brauer, 1878)

Cratilla metallica (Brauer, 1878)

Photo Above : A male Cratilla metallica perch on hanging plant above a rock holes couple meters below. The rock holes is only an inch deep and 6 inches in diameter covered with leave derbies.

Cratilla metallica occurs in forest, mainly primary dipterocarp, from lowlands up to 900 m, and breeds in small shallow pools which it frequently shares with Indaeschna grubaueri, Males sometimes perch for long periods above such pools awaiting females. Both sexes are immediately recognized by their relatively large size (hw, 34-39 mm), heavy build and dark tips to the wings.

The larvae of Cratilla metallica are rather elongate for a libellulid. They are very aggressive and take quite large prey including tadpoles. They will sometimes survive in large buttress pans, generally following disturbance of the deep humus layer, in which case they exclude Lyriothemis cleis and other species.

Cratilla metallica  is bigger and stronger in build. And is brighter color then Cratilla lineata

Male  hw 36-38 mm. Recognized by dark wing-tips, slate blue on abdomen S3-4, and metallic green thorax. Female hw 38 mm; abdomen + apps 29.5 mm; wings similar to S; lacks abdomen blue; three yellow lines laterally on synthorax; abdomen relatively much longer than Agrionoptera sexlineata. Closed forests, 0-900 m. Breeds in shallow forest pools and sometimes large phytotelmata. Widespread in tropical Asia.
 

Cratilla metallica (Brauer, 1878)


 

INDEX OF DRAGONFLY

site stats