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I think its a red damselfly but this is a close as it would let me get.
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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"Female (""androchrome"") red damselfly. In the first photo there appears to be a couple of mites hanging on underneath. The last three photos are of the last abdomen segments from different angles (two different cameras used give slightly different image quality) Scale"
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Eating a small moth. Interestingly what appear to be the claspers, for holding onto the female, appear to be the bottom set of appendages to the rear of the abdomen, whereas on the blues it is the upper set. Mind you I haven't got a photo of them fully extended on a red damselfly, so I might be wrong.
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Eating a small moth. Interestingly what appear to be the claspers, for holding onto the female, appear to be the bottom set of appendages to the rear of the abdomen, whereas on the blues it is the upper set. Mind you I haven't got a photo of them fully extended on a red damselfly, so I might be wrong.
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Eating a small moth. Interestingly what appear to be the claspers, for holding onto the female, appear to be the bottom set of appendages to the rear of the abdomen, whereas on the blues it is the upper set. Mind you I haven't got a photo of them fully extended on a red damselfly, so I might be wrong.
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Eating a small moth. Interestingly what appear to be the claspers, for holding onto the female, appear to be the bottom set of appendages to the rear of the abdomen, whereas on the blues it is the upper set. Mind you I haven't got a photo of them fully extended on a red damselfly, so I might be wrong.