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SAVING THE OCEANIC HAWAIIAN DAMSELFLY

The beautiful oceanic Hawaiian damselfly is one of 23 damselfly species on the Hawaiian Islands, endemic to the island of Oahu. Damselflies begin life as an egg, soon hatching into a predacious naiad that stalks streambanks for other aquatic invertebrates or swims after small fish, and then molts into the mature form. In this last embodiment, the falcon-like damselfly swoops down on other flying insects such as midges. When the damselfly itself is disturbed, it takes refuge in the forest canopy overhanging the stream; when seized, it plays dead.

The oceanic Hawaiian damselfly is one of many Hawaiian animals suffering from lengthy bureaucratic listing delays. It was placed on the federal candidate list for Endangered Species Act protection in 1984. A quarter-century later, it’s still on the list, still unprotected, and sliding toward extinction.

The Center is working to secure full Endangered Species Act protection for the damselfly. In 2004 we petitioned for protection for the damselfly and other candidate species under the Endangered Species Act; in 2006 we filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to force an endangered species listing for the damselfly and hundreds of other species languishing on the candidate list.

KEY DOCUMENTS
1984 candidate status

ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT PROFILE

ACTION TIMELINE

NATURAL HISTORY

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Search our newsroom for the oceanic Hawaiian damselfly

RELATED ISSUES
Candidate Project
The Endangered Species Act

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Contact: Jeff Miller

Photo © David Preston and Don Polhemusi