Abstract

Several odonate species are threatened in the Mediterranean basin and some of them show alarming decreasing trends. The distribution and population estimations provided by the IUCN are based on occasional field sampling or non-rigorous methodologies and could be erroneous and misleading. To obtain reliable estimations of the population size and distribution of three threatened species, Calopteryx exul, Coenagrion mercuriale, and Gomphus lucasii, we first conducted capture-mark-recapture in a natural population during one flight season, and second we carried out intensive sampling of adults, larvae and exuviae in the Seybouse watershed, Northeast Algeria. In addition, a revision of odonate occurrence and distribution in the watershed was done by pooling information collected over six years (2010–2015). Our results show that population estimations of the three species are much higher than what the IUCN presents; that is, 2208 individuals of C. exul (22.08% of the estimated global population), 1765 individua...

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