Right now, young dragonflies are growing up in wetlands across Canada. A single female dragonfly can lay thousands of eggs in a wetland—which can take months or even years to become adults.
For dragonfly eggs and larvae, that wetland is their entire world. And when it’s destroyed? Her offspring are lost, along with every generation that should follow.
Here’s where you come in. When you donate just $50 or more, you can save habitat that will be home to countless generations of emerging dragonflies long into the future, along with hundreds of other wildlife species.
Act now to save a dragonfly nursery.
À mesure que le printemps avance, c’est par milliers que les observations de libellules nous arrivent dans le cadre du Projet Libellule, en commençant par le Sud de l’Ontario et du Québec et la Colombie‑Britannique et en enchaînant avec d’autres villes d’un océan à l’autre. Nous voudrions aujourd’hui savoir quelles sont les observations qui sont les plus captivantes ou exceptionnelles. Adressez nous un commentaire ou taguez nous dans un billet sur Instagram ou sur Facebook (@canards_illimites, #ProjetLibellule).
As spring has progressed, thousands of dragonfly observations have poured into Project Dragonfly, starting in southern Ontario, Quebec and B.C., and then filling in the gaps across Canada. Now we’d like to know—what observation of yours has been most exciting or unusual? Tell us in a comment or tag us in a post on Instagram or Facebook (@ducksunlimitedcanada, #ProjectDragonfly).