The Prague Post - After miraculous comeback, damselfly in distress again

EUR -
AED 4.258739
AFN 80.583827
ALL 97.830047
AMD 445.374223
ANG 2.075098
AOA 1063.23134
ARS 1476.764395
AUD 1.787377
AWG 2.087041
AZN 1.970906
BAM 1.957408
BBD 2.341223
BDT 140.765619
BGN 1.955395
BHD 0.437184
BIF 3392.601439
BMD 1.159467
BND 1.491825
BOB 8.01265
BRL 6.429481
BSD 1.159562
BTN 99.78482
BWP 15.665002
BYN 3.794717
BYR 22725.559878
BZD 2.329233
CAD 1.594906
CDF 3346.222968
CHF 0.932794
CLF 0.029155
CLP 1118.804859
CNY 8.329263
CNH 8.329712
COP 4661.441334
CRC 585.085612
CUC 1.159467
CUP 30.725885
CVE 110.671095
CZK 24.64773
DJF 206.060704
DKK 7.463258
DOP 69.973646
DZD 151.261863
EGP 57.275484
ERN 17.39201
ETB 158.384528
FJD 2.619759
FKP 0.863596
GBP 0.864307
GEL 3.142133
GGP 0.863596
GHS 12.058021
GIP 0.863596
GMD 82.904661
GNF 10036.348913
GTQ 8.897308
GYD 242.502319
HKD 9.100143
HNL 30.552505
HRK 7.534107
HTG 152.245048
HUF 399.007427
IDR 18944.942693
ILS 3.898332
IMP 0.863596
INR 99.7928
IQD 1518.902216
IRR 48828.129575
ISK 141.849117
JEP 0.863596
JMD 185.892685
JOD 0.822089
JPY 172.280643
KES 150.146227
KGS 101.39499
KHR 4661.059301
KMF 493.3575
KPW 1043.484748
KRW 1613.932215
KWD 0.354403
KYD 0.966302
KZT 619.283997
LAK 25003.913024
LBP 103830.300155
LKR 349.45703
LRD 233.053148
LSL 20.708578
LTL 3.423605
LVL 0.70135
LYD 6.284156
MAD 10.522744
MDL 19.712361
MGA 5136.44076
MKD 61.610605
MMK 2433.693033
MNT 4158.159331
MOP 9.374821
MRU 46.146637
MUR 53.022474
MVR 17.855726
MWK 2013.346003
MXN 21.776306
MYR 4.923683
MZN 74.159589
NAD 20.708225
NGN 1774.900675
NIO 42.610265
NOK 11.939502
NPR 159.654134
NZD 1.955198
OMR 0.445822
PAB 1.159562
PEN 4.127121
PGK 4.803095
PHP 66.347013
PKR 330.448342
PLN 4.25671
PYG 8975.372016
QAR 4.221154
RON 5.074522
RSD 117.136333
RUB 90.490451
RWF 1665.574835
SAR 4.349046
SBD 9.622242
SCR 16.424482
SDG 696.239219
SEK 11.30752
SGD 1.491423
SHP 0.911159
SLE 26.493944
SLL 24313.454977
SOS 662.632938
SRD 42.763451
STD 23998.632997
SVC 10.146334
SYP 15075.217137
SZL 20.708562
THB 37.685957
TJS 11.085449
TMT 4.06973
TND 3.369702
TOP 2.715588
TRY 46.795985
TTD 7.871533
TWD 34.119063
TZS 3026.209234
UAH 48.545273
UGX 4154.41227
USD 1.159467
UYU 46.908529
UZS 14739.727408
VES 135.617096
VND 30331.665633
VUV 138.713856
WST 3.200285
XAF 656.501887
XAG 0.030394
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.133519
XDR 0.813703
XOF 655.736833
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.837469
ZAR 20.69339
ZMK 10436.59814
ZMW 27.104496
ZWL 373.348011
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

After miraculous comeback, damselfly in distress again
After miraculous comeback, damselfly in distress again / Photo: CHRISTOPHE BROCHARD - OFFICE POUR LES INSECTS ET LEUR ENVIRONMENT(OPIE)/AFP

After miraculous comeback, damselfly in distress again

When the damselfly reappeared in France in 2009 after a 133-year absence, it was considered a small miracle.

Text size:

But the dragonfly's smaller cousin hasn't been seen in four years, sparking fresh fears it may be gone for good -- a worrying indicator of the health of the world's precious wetlands in which it breeds.

Damselflies face menaces on multiple fronts. In Asia, the wetlands and jungles in which they live are often cleared for crops like palm oil. In Latin America their habitats are razed to build houses and offices.

In Europe and North America, pesticides, pollutants and climate change have posed the biggest threat.

So when the Nehalennia speciosa damselfly was spotted in wetlands in the Jura region of eastern France for the first time since 1876, scientists were overjoyed -- calling the rediscovery an "ecological scoop".

But that comeback was probably only a "remission from the collapse that our biodiversity is suffering," said naturalist Francois Dehondt.

The last confirmed sighting was in 2019, when a severe drought gripped the Jura, and experts fear there might not be a second comeback.

"The water source that shelters the insect was reduced to nothing" by drought, Dehondt wrote in France's Le Monde newspaper in December.

In 2020, water levels remained low. The following year, some water returned to the bogs of the Jura where a dozen or so damselflies had been spotted in 2009.

And then last year -- the hottest on record in France -- the region was once again parched.

Damselflies were nowhere to be seen.

- 'Warning lights' -

With a slender green-blue body that resembles bamboo and delicate translucent wings, the Nehalennia speciosa might look like a dragonfly to the untrained eye.

But at about 25 millimetres (less than an inch) long, Europe's smallest damselflies don't fly as well and often need to be shaken from bushes to be seen, making them very hard to detect.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) said 16 percent of all 6,016 dragonfly and damselfly species globally risk extinction. In France, the damselfly is classified as "critically endangered".

France's Office for Insects and their Environment (OPIE), which is in charge of monitoring damselflies, suspects the subspecies has disappeared again.

"Given the state of environmental degradation and drought that we have seen for years, (the likelihood of seeing a damselfly in the Jura) is really very compromised," OPIE's Xavier Houard told AFP.

"The warning lights are red. But it's too soon to be completely certain," he added.

The agency will only confirm a "proven disappearance" of a species after 25 years of "non-observation" during which thorough searches are carried out.

And Houard has not lost hope just yet.

"The species has already demonstrated its ability to pass under the radar of observers" for over a century, he said.

- World Wetlands Day -

The demise of France's damselflies further underpins how vulnerable the country's wetlands are -- a reality across Europe and indeed the world.

"Globally, these ecosystems are disappearing three times faster than forests," IUCN director general Bruno Oberle said in 2021 when the organisation updated its Red List of Threatened Species.

Since 1900 an estimated 64 percent of the world's wetlands -- which include lakes, rivers, marshes, lagoons and peat bogs -- have disappeared, according to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands treaty.

Wetlands are crucial for the planet's health. They store 25 percent of the world's carbon and provide clean water and food. Up to 40 percent of the world's species live and breed in wetlands, according to the United Nations.

Yet a quarter are in danger of extinction.

The UN -- which marks World Wetlands Day on Thursday -- said there is an "urgent need" to restore 50 percent of destroyed wetlands by 2030.

In the meantime, France's scientists continue to scour for the elusive damselfly, whose very presence is "a wonderful indicator... of the health of wetlands", according to Houard.

Their disappearance would be nothing short of an "alarm bell", he added.

M.Jelinek--TPP