yes
Dragonflies
Dragonflies generally capture insects on-the-fly. You may see dragonflies flying or waiting on a branch or cattail. When an unsuspecting insect comes flying along, they either launch toward the pray, or swoop in from above. This happens very fast. Dragonflies capture an insect by forming a sort of net with its legs. As they approach, they net the insect by coming in faster than the insect is flying, they fly very slightly higher than the insect, thus allowing the insect to slip into the net formed by its legs. They then eat the insect alive. Now, I do not know for sure if dragonflies actually pursue bees specifically, but if they do, this is the method used.
no the cat is
Type your answer here... dragonfly
locust, 73mph
- Dragonflies - other tiny frogs - any other flying insect
Dragonflies are capable of flying at speeds up to 30 miles per hour. Their long, slender bodies and transparent wings make them incredibly agile flyers.
Yes, Dragonflies are insects. They have six legs and are one of the fastest insects in the world.
insect
No. Dragonflies eat only flying insects.
The fastest flying insect would be the Southern Giant Darner. In a rough field estimate records it flying at 60 miles per hour. However a more reliable text clocks it at 35 miles per hour. As for the ground insect the Australian Tiger Beetle takes the crown at 5.6 miles per hour. One common misconception is that the American Cockroach is the fastest but it falls well short with a speed of just 2.4 miles per hour.
yes i bite insect but when we bite dragonfly can we make superhero