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Aeshna
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Aeshna
Temporal range: Late Eocene to present
Southern hawker (Aeshna cyanea)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Odonata
Infraorder: Anisoptera
Family: Aeshnidae
Subfamily: Aeshninae
Genus: Aeshna
Fabricius, 1775[1]
Species

See text

A. petalura female laying eggs
Phulchowki, Nepal
A. petalura female laying eggs
Phulchowki, Nepal

Aeshna,[2] or the mosaic darners, is a genus of dragonflies from the family Aeshnidae. Species within this genus are generally known as "hawkers" (Old World) or "darners" (New World).

Description

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These are relatively large dragonflies. Their thoraces and abdomens are brown in color, with blue or yellow stripes or spots on the thorax, and yellow, blue or green spots on the abdomen.

Natalia von Ellenrieder's 2003 paper demonstrated that the Holarctic and Neotropical species placed in this genus did not share a common ancestor, and proposed the latter be placed in the genus Rhionaeschna.

The name Aeshna was coined by the Danish entomologist Fabricius in the 18th century. The name may have resulted from a printer's error in spelling the Greek Aechma, "a spear".[3] The spelling Aeschna has been intermittently used over a period of time, but is now abandoned for the original name Aeshna. However, derived genus names (such as Rhionaeschna) retain the 'sch' spelling, as this is how they were first cited.

Species

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Many species formerly included in Aeshna have been split into other genera, including Afroaeschna, Andaeschna, Pinheyschna, Rhionaeschna, and Zosteraeschna.[4]

The genus Aeshna includes these species:[4]

Fossil species

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Aeshna andancensis holotype wing

Note that many fossil species in the genus were named at a time when many extant species now included in other genera were included in Aeshna.[4] The list of valid fossil species is based on Nel et al (2022), with species of uncertain validity noted:[10][11]

References

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