Summary[edit] Description: Aeshna juncea Schlupf. Date: 6 June 2007. Source: Photo made by myself. Author: Siga. Permission (Reusing this file): Public domain.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Common Hawker dragonfly. A male of the species (Aeshna juncea), common especially in moorland habitats in the north and west. This one was resting on a cool day on a young oak, one of many planted as part of the Carrifran Wildwood project - see1292961 and www.carrifran.org.uk. Date: 21 July 2009. Source: From geograph.org.uk. Author: M J Richardson. Attribution(required by the license)M J Richardson / Common Hawker dragonfly / CC BY-SA 2.0. M J Richardson / Common Hawker dragonfly. Camera location55° 23′ 49″ N, 3° 19′ 45″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 55.397010; -3.329300. Object location55° 23′ 49″ N, 3° 19′ 45″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 55.397010; -3.329300.
Summary[edit] Description: You'd think if you went all the way to Mongolia, you'd get something rarer but this turns out to be a species we get at home. Date: 7 September 2010, 08:01. Source: Common Hawker. Author: Alastair Rae from London, United Kingdom.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Common Hawker (Aeshna juncea) Unusual to get one to stay still and pose, especially one this bright. Typical species of Scottish moorland but not common in many parts of the UK, despite name. Date: 27 July 2003. Source: From geograph.org.uk. Author: Hugh Venables. Attribution(required by the license)Hugh Venables / Common Hawker (Aeshna juncea) / CC BY-SA 2.0. Hugh Venables / Common Hawker (Aeshna juncea). Camera location57° 39′ 19″ N, 5° 24′ 36″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 57.655400; -5.410000. Object location57° 39′ 19″ N, 5° 24′ 36″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 57.655400; -5.410000.
No machine-readable author provided. Jensbn~commonswiki assumed (based on copyright claims).
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: A dragonfly (Aeshna juncea) hovering over a pond in the Pyrenees. Taking a picture of a flying dragonfly is very difficult. They fly very fast and are very hard to follow with a camera - especially if you don't have near-instant focusing capabilities. However, they tend to patrol a certain area, often returning to specific spots where they hover for about a second before flying on. I adjusted the focus and zoom to that particular spot and waited. After dozens of attempts, I made this one. Photo taken by me, Jens Buurgaard Nielsen in August 2005. Date: 5 August 2005 (according to Exif data). Source: No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims). Author: No machine-readable author provided. Jensbn~commonswiki assumed (based on copyright claims).
Summary[edit] Description: Aeshna juncea. Date: 6 June 2007. Source: Photo made by myself. Author: Siga. Permission (Reusing this file): public domain.
Summary[edit] Description: Aeshna juncea. Date: 6 June 2007. Source: Photo made by myself. Author: Siga. Permission (Reusing this file): public domain.
Summary[edit] Description: Saltoun Wood, East Lothian, Scotland. Date: 17 August 2015, 15:23. Source: Aeschna juncea. Author: S. Rae from Scotland, UK.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Common Hawker (Aeshna juncea) on a birch in Simo, Finland. Suomi: Siniukonkorento (Aeshna juncea) koivunrungolla Simossa. Date: Taken on 24 July 2010. Source: Own work. Author: Estormiz. Permission(Reusing this file): I, the author of this work, will publish this photograph into Public Domain for anybody to use it in any way. Camera location65° 39′ 59.82″ N, 24° 45′ 51.94″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 65.666618; 24.764427.
Summary[edit] Description: Aeshna juncea Schlupf. Date: 6 June 2007. Source: Photo made by myself. Author: Siga. Permission (Reusing this file): Public domain.