Our half-acre pond seems to be doing pretty well since I added a couple of buckets of water and bottom matter from the swamp as well as planting the shallow end with Sagittaria and Pontederia. For several years, the water was virtually sterile with very few microscopic critters at all. Now that I’ve added some “livelier” matter from the swamp, it seems to be doing better.

This summer (2025) in particular I’ve noticed several species of Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) that I hadn’t seen before around our pond. So here is a list as of most, though maybe not all, of the species of Odonata I have observed at or near our pond during the summer of 2025.

Dragonflies

1. Common Green DarnerAnax junius

Common Green Darner

2. Regal DarnerCoryphaeschna ingens

3. Swamp DarnerEpiaeschna heros

Swamp Darner

4. Cyrano DarnerNasiaeschna pentacantha

Cyrano Darner

5. Gray-green ClubtailArigomphus pallidus

Gray-green Clubtail

6. Lancet ClubtailPhanogomphus exilis

Lancet Clubtail

7. Ashy ClubtailPhanogomphus lividus

Ashy Clubtail

8. Stream CruiserMacromia transversa

Stream Cruiser

9. Common Baskettail – Epitheca cynosura

Common Baskettail

10. Mantled Baskettail – Epitheca semiaquea

Mantled Baskettail

11. Fine-lined Emerald – Somatochlora filosa

Somatochlora filosa, Fine-lined Emerald, at our pond

12. Red-veined Pennant – Celithemis bertha

Red-veined Pennant

13. Halloween Pennant – Celithemis eponina

Halloween Pennant

14. Banded Pennant – Celithemis fasciata

Banded Pennant

15. Swift Setwing – Dythemis velox

Swift Setwing

16. Eastern Pondhawk – Erythemis simplicicollis

Eastern Pondhawk

17. Little Blue Dragonlet – Erythrodiplax minuscula

Little Blue Dragonlet

18. Golden-winged Skimmer – Libellula auripennis

Golden-winged Skimmer

19. Bar-winged Skimmer – Libellula axilena

Bar-winged Skimmer

20. Slaty Skimmer – Libellula incesta

21. Widow Skimmer – Libellula luctuosa

Widow Skimmer

22. Needham’s Skimmer – Libellula needhami

Needham’s Skimmer

23. Painted Skimmer – Libellula semifasciata

Painted Skimmer

24. Great Blue Skimmer – Libellula vibrans

Great Blue Skimmer

25. Common Whitetail – Plathemis lydia

Common Whitetail

26. Blue Corporal – Ladona deplanata

Blue Corporal

27. Blue Dasher – Pachydiplax longipennis

Blue Dasher

28. Wandering Glider – Pantala flavescens

Wandering Glider

29. Eastern Amberwing – Perithemis tenera

Eastern Amberwing
Eastern Amberwing

30. Blue-faced Meadowhawk – Sympetrum ambiguum

Blue-faced Meadowhawk

31. Carolina Saddlebags – Tramea carolina

Carolina Saddlebags

Damselflies

32. Swamp SpreadwingLestes vigilax

Swamp Spreadwing

33. Southern SpreadwingLestes australis

Southern Spreadwing

34. Carolina SpreadwingLestes vidua

35. Elegant SpreadwingLestes inaequalis

Elegant Spreadwing

36. Blue-fronted DancerArgia apicalis

Blue-fronted Dancer

37. Pale BluetEnallagma pallidum

Pale Bluet

38. Orange Bluet Enallagma signatum

Orange Bluets

39. Citrine ForktailIschnura hastata

Citrine Forktail

40. Fragile ForktailIschnura posita

Fragile Forktail

That’s an even 40 species, although I may have forgotten some. There are others, such as Spangled Skimmers, that are nearby–just 200 yards from the pond. But since I haven’t actually seen them at the pond, I left them off the list (as well as a few others such as the Mocha Emerald).

Not bad.