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  1. Abstract Odonata is a midsized insect order (~6420 species) containing 3 suborders: Anisoptera (dragonflies, 3,120 species), Zygoptera (damselflies, ~3,297 species), and the intermediate Anisozygoptera (~3 species). In this review of the suborder Zygoptera, we provide a brief overview of their biology, ecology, and natural history. We also review the current state of their systematics and phylogenetics, highlighting remaining higher-level classification (eg family, superfamily) issues to address. Lastly, we will emphasize areas that are still in need of exploration which would greatly improve our understanding of the group. 
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  2. Abstract Mountains and islands provide an opportunity for studying the biogeography of diversification and population fragmentation. Aotearoa (New Zealand) is an excellent location to investigate both phenomena due to alpine emergence and oceanic separation. While it would be expected that separation across oceanic and elevation gradients are major barriers to gene flow in animals, including aquatic insects, such hypotheses have not been thoroughly tested in these taxa. By integrating population genomic from subgenomic Anchored-Hybrid Enrichment sequencing, ecological niche modeling, and morphological analyses from scanning-electron microscopy, we show that tectonic uplift and oceanic vicariance are implicated in speciation and population structure in Kapokapowai (Uropetala) dragonflies. Although Te Moana o Raukawa (Cook Strait) is likely responsible for some of the genetic structure observed, speciation has not yet occurred in populations separated by the strait. We find that the altitudinal gradient across Kā Tiritiri-o-te-Moana (the Southern Alps) is not impervious, but it significantly restricts gene flow between the aforementioned species. Our data support the hypothesis of an active colonization of Kā Tiritiri-o-te-Moana by the ancestral population of Kapokapowai, followed by a recolonization of the lowlands. These findings provide key foundations for the study of lineages endemic to Aotearoa. 
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  3. Abstract The striped emeralds (SomatochloraSelys) are a Holarctic group of medium‐sized metallic green dragonflies that mainly inhabit bogs and seepages, alpine streams, lakes, channels and lowland brooks. With 42 species they are the most diverse genus within Corduliidae (Odonata: Anisoptera). Systematic, taxonomic and biogeographic resolution withinSomatochloraremains unclear, with numerous hypotheses of relatedness based on wing veins, male claspers (epiproct and paraprocts) and nymphs. Furthermore,Somatochlora borisiwas recently described as a new genus (Corduliochlora) based on 17 morphological characters, but its position with respect toSomatochlorais unclear. We present a phylogenetic reconstruction ofSomatochlorausing Anchored Hybrid Enrichment (AHE) sequences of 40/42Somatochloraspecies (includingCorduliochlora borisi). Our data recover the monophyly ofSomatochlora, withC. borisirecovered as sister to the remainingSomatochlora. We also recover three highly supported clades and one of mixed support; this lack of resolution is most likely due to incomplete lineage sorting, third‐codon position saturation based on iterative analyses run on variations of our dataset and hybridization. Furthermore, we constructed a dataset for all species based on 20 morphological characters from the literature which were used to evaluate phylogenetic groups recovered with molecular data; the data support the validity ofCorduliochloraas a genus distinct fromSomatochlora. Finally, divergence time estimation and biogeographic analysis indicateSomatochloraoriginated in the Western North Hemisphere during the Miocene, with three dispersal events to the Eastern North Hemisphere (11, 7 and 5 Ma, respectively) across the Beringian Land Bridge. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 14, 2026
  4. Abstract The use of gDNAs isolated from museum specimens for high throughput sequencing, especially targeted sequencing in the context of phylogenetics, is a common practice. Yet, little understanding has been focused on comparing the quality of DNA and results of sequencing museum DNAs. Dragonflies and damselflies are ubiquitous in freshwater ecosystems and are commonly collected and preserved insects in museum collections hence their use in this study. However, the history of odonate preservation across time and museums has resulted in wide variability in the success of viable DNA extraction, necessitating an assessment of their usefulness in genetic studies. Using Anchored Hybrid Enrichment probes, we sequenced DNA from samples at 2 museums, 48 from the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in NYC, USA and 46 from the Naturalis Biodiversity Center (RMNH) in Leiden, Netherlands ranging from global collection localities and across a 120-year time span. We recovered at least 4 loci out of an >1,000 locus probe set for all samples, with the average capture being ~385 loci (539 loci on average when a clade of ambiguous taxa omitted). Neither specimen age nor size was a good predictor of locus capture, but recapture rates differed significantly between museums. Samples from the AMNH had lower overall locus capture than the RMNH, perhaps due to differences in specimen storage over time. 
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  5. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  6. Neurocordulia, commonly called shadowdragons, are crepuscular dragonflies, flying mainly at dusk. The genus comprises seven species, which occur across the eastern part of Canada and the United States. Here, we used targeted enrichment probes to sequence ~1000 loci for all specimens of each species, allowing for the first phylogenetic assessment of the genus. Additionally, we collected individuals of N. yamaskanensis from a population in Ontario, Canada, and used whole genome resequencing to estimate population structure. Beyond broadly reconstructing the phylogeny of Neurocordulia, we provided a comprehensive bibliography review of past research on the genus, a key to the species, and distribution models for each species. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 31, 2026
  7. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
  8. Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
  9. More than 1.2 million distribution records were used to create species distribution models for 402 Palaearctic species of dragonflies and damselflies. On the basis of these diversity maps of total, lentic and lotic diversity for the whole of the Palaearctic (excluding China and the Himalayan region) are presented. These maps show a clear pattern of decreasing diversity longitudinally, with species numbers dropping in the eastern half of Europe and remaining low throughout a large part of Russia, then increasing again towards Russia’s Far East and Korea. There are clear differences in diversity patterns of lentic and lotic species, with lentic species being dominant in colder and more arid areas. Areas with a high diversity of species assessed as threatened on the IUCN red list are largely restricted to the Mediterranean, Southwest Asia, and Japan, with clear hotspots found in the Levant and the southern half of Japan. The diversity at species, generic, and family level is higher in the south of Japan than in areas at a similar latitude in the western Mediterranean. This is likely to be the result of the more humid climate of Japan resulting in a higher diversity of freshwater habitats and the stronger impact of the glacial periods in the Western Palaearctic in combination with the Sahara, preventing tropical African lineages dispersing northwards. 
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  10. Rarely have studies assessed Odonata diversity for the entire Nearctic realm by including Canada, the United States, and Mexico. For the first time, we explored Odonata diversity in this region according to a definition of natural community assemblages and generated species distribution models (SDMs). Species occurrence data were assembled by reviewing databases of specimens held by significant Odonata repositories and through an extensive search of literature references. Species were categorized as forest-dependent or non-forest-dependent, as lentic or lotic-dependent, and according to conservation status. Predicted distributions were stacked for all species across their entire ranges, including areas outside of the Nearctic. Species richness and corrected weighted endemism (CWE) were then calculated for each grid cell. We found a pattern of greater species richness in the eastern portion of the Nearctic, which can be explained by the higher aquatic habitat diversity at micro and macroscales east of the Rocky Mountains, promoting niche partitioning and specialization. In the Nearctic region, the southeastern US has the highest number of endemic species of dragonflies and damselflies; this degree of endemism is likely due to glacial refuges providing a foundation for the evolution of a rich and unique biota. 
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