Ceriagrion olivaceum[3] is a species of damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae. it is commonly known as rusty marsh dart.[4][5] This species can be found in south and southeast Asia.[1][6]
Subspecies
Ceriagrion olivaceum olivaceum Laidlaw, 1914
Ceriagrion olivaceum aurantiacum Fraser, 1924
Fraser described C. aurantiacum from southern India[2] but later concluded that it was a subspecies or race of C. olivaceum.[7] Asahina in his revision of Asian Ceriagrion compared both the specimens and decided to retain the race, stating the subapical tooth of superior caudal appendages differently shaped.[8]C. o. olivaceum is widespread in India and Southeast Asia. C. o. aurantiacum is only known from southwest India.[9]
Description and habitat
It is a medium-sized damselfly with olivaceous brown capped greenish eyes. Its thorax is olive green, paler on the sides. Its abdomen is throughout olivaceous brown on dorsal half and paler on the ventral half. Its superior anal appendages are brown and triangular when seen from the dorsum. The apex broadly rounded. The inferiors are sloping strongly up to meet the superiors, broad at base and tapering to a point. Female is similar to the male.[7]
It breeds in slow running marshy streams, ponds, and swamps.[7][2][10][4][5]
^K.A., Subramanian; K.G., Emiliyamma; R., Babu; C., Radhakrishnan; S.S., Talmale (2018). Atlas of Odonata (Insecta) of the Western Ghats, India. Zoological Survey of India. pp. 151–152. ISBN9788181714954.
^ Asahina, S. (1967) A revision of the Asiatic species of the damselflies of the genus Ceriagrion (Odonata, Agrionidae) Japanese Journal Zoology 15 (3): 255-334, figs. 1-237.