Pacific clubtail (dragonfly) (Phanogomphus kurilis)

Category: Arthropods
Ecosystems: Riparian areas
State status: Candidate
Vulnerability to climate change (More details)

Moderate-
High

If you see this species, please share your observation using the WDFW wildlife reporting form. Providing detailed information such as a photo and exact coordinates will improve the confidence and value of this observation to WDFW species conservation and management.

The population size of Pacific clubtail in Washington is critical and its population trend is declining. The species is of concern due to the small number of isolated populations and continued threats to its habitat.

Description and Range

Physical description

Pacific clubtail is a dragonfly in the family Gomphidae. Adults are 1.8 to 2 inches long. Males and females are similar in coloration. Gordon and Kerst (2005) describe the species as having a green face, blue eyes, black legs, and black abdomen with yellow on the dorsal (top) surface of each segment, and large, yellow spots on the underside of abdominal segments 8 and 9. For more details, including a description of larvae, visit the Xerces Society.

Ecology and life history

Pacific clubtail are found in large ponds and lakes in western Washington; in other parts of its range, the species is found in streams and rivers with good currents with sandy to muddy bottoms.

Clubtail dragonflies complete a life cycle composed of two main phases: a flightless aquatic larva (nymph stage), which may be continuous for one to two winters, and the adult flight (reproductive stage). They inhabit sites year-round as egg, larval nymph, and adult, typically moving within only a few to several hundred meters of their natal locations. Adults do not seasonally migrate and die soon after their reproductive summer.

Both life stages are predatory; the majority of life cycle is spent as aquatic larvae. Nymphs feed on aquatic invertebrates and possibly small vertebrates (fish, frog and salamander larva). After multiple aquatic instars (gradual metamorphosis) over one or two winters, mature nymphs crawl onto rocks or vegetation and shed their exoskeleton to become a new adult (teneral) in late spring and summer.

Adults are aerial predators of smaller insects and similar sized butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera), as well as smaller Odonates.

Water temperature influences the timing of emergence from within a year or over two years. Weather influences flight period duration, with wet or cold conditions potentially shortening the flight period and warm, dry conditions promoting the duration and later occurrence dates of the flight period.

Male clubtails seek mates by patrolling a territory that coincides with optimal aquatic habitat for female egg-laying, and hence for larvae. There is usually no courtship behavior. After copulation, females usually hover just above the water of slow moving or gentle current stretches and close to shore while periodically dipping the tail to deposit multiple eggs.

Geographic range

The range of Pacific clubtail is restricted to northern California to the Oregon coast and mountains, and north to the South Puget Sound trough. In Washington, these species occur in low numbers of small, isolated populations. Only three localities in Washington are known for the Pacific clubtail, and confirmation is needed for the Thurston County location; a historical record exists from Lake Washington (King County, 1933).

For a range-wide map and conservation status of this species, check out NatureServe Explorer.

Climate vulnerability

Sensitivity to climate change

Moderate-
High

There is little information on the sensitivity of Pacific clubtail to climate change. However, Pacific clubtail sensitivity is likely influenced by air temperature, water temperature, and shifting flow regimes. Temperature is known to influence the phenology, development, behavior and other characteristics of dragonflies, and warming temperatures (both air and water) will likely impact this species during various life stages. Hydrological changes (e.g., reduced stream flows) and drought may degrade or reduce aquatic habitat available for this species and/or compound increases in water temperature. Pacific clubtail is also likely sensitive to disturbance events (e.g., fire, floods) that reduce riparian vegetation, which eliminates stream shade and foraging and roosting sites for adults, and/or that increase siltation, which can kill larvae.

Confidence: Low

Exposure to climate change

Moderate-
High

  • Increased air and water temperatures
  • Altered flow regimes (low summer flows and increased winter flooding)
  • Altered fire regimes
Confidence: Low

Conservation

This species is identified as a Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) under the State Wildlife Action Plan (SWAP). SGCN-classified species include both those with and without legal protection status under the Federal or State Endangered Species programs, as well as game species with low populations. The WDFW SWAP is part of a nationwide effort by all 50 states and five U.S. territories to develop conservation action plans for fish, wildlife and their natural habitats—identifying opportunities for species' recovery before they are imperiled and more limited.
This species is identified as a Priority Species under WDFW's Priority Habitat and Species Program. Priority species require protective measures for their survival due to their population status, sensitivity to habitat alteration, and/or recreational, commercial, or tribal importance. The PHS program is the agency's main means of sharing fish and wildlife information with local governments, landowners, and others who use it to protect priority habitats for land use planning.

Research is needed to quantify specific habitat requirements for this species, including aquatic larval substrates, river and stream, or lake and pond characteristics, and other key habitat features.

Conservation Threats and Actions Needed

  • Agriculture and aquaculture side effects
    • Threat: Pesticide and fertilizer runoff and streams
    • Action Needed: Monitor occurrence waters for chemical contaminates
    • Threat: Siltation and degradation of stream and bottom habitat used by developing larvae by unsustainable grazing, commercial or recreational uses.
    • Action Needed: Work to improve unsustainable grazing and commercial use practices in waters of known occurrence
  • Fish and wildlife habitat loss or degradation
    • Threat: Vulnerable mostly because of extreme rarity of any known populations
    • Action Needed: Efforts that protect water quality most important to larval development. Use land acquisitions, conservation easements and landowner agreements to protect significant shoreline areas from degradation.
    • Threat: Loss of riparian vegetation that provide shade and perch sites; ameliorates stream temperatures
    • Action Needed: Monitor vegetation around known occurrence sites
  • Invasive and other problematic species
    • Threat: Introduced predatory fish species that may not have co-evolved with these species.
    • Action Needed: Monitor streams in context of non-native aquatic species.
  • Climate change and severe weather
    • Threat: Increased environmental temperatures may affect life history with unknown consequences
    • Action Needed: Monitor streams in context of climate changes

See the Climate vulnerability section for more information about the threats posed by climate change to this species.

Resources

References

Hassall C. and D.J. Thompson. 2008. The effects of environmental warming on Odonata: a review. International journal of Odontology 11:131-153.

Paulson, D.R. 2014. Washington Odonata. Slater Museum of Natural History, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma. Sept 2014.  http://www.pugetsound.edu/academics/academic-resources/slater-museum/biodiversity[1]resources/dragonflies/washington-odonata/ [old link]

Paulson, D.R. 2009. Dragonflies and damselflies of the West. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

USFS-BLM. 2008b. Species fact sheet: Pacific Clubtail (Gomphus kurilis). Prepared by S. Foltz. Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, Portland, Oregon.

Other resources