Wednesday 10 August 2016

Be Like a Dragonfly


I just listened to a lovely segment on Quirks and Quarks (CBC Radio One), one of the many wonderful science podcasts I get to listen to thanks to the World Wide Web.

This piece was about a plain old dragonfly that is found in many parts of the world, not just the same species but a single, mobile population that floats over oceans, eating aerial plankton along the way. I thought the method this being uses for such great flights was a good metaphor for hominid existence, too. So I made this little graphic to point it out.





















Listen Here.

Dragonfly study by Dr. Jessica Ware.
Image by Greg Lasley.


No comments: