Blauwe breedscheenjuffer (Platycnemis pennipes)
• English name: Blue Featherleg
• German name: Blaue Federlibelle
• French name: Agrion à larges pattes
• Dutch name: Blauwe breedscheenjuffer
• Swedish name: Flodflickslända
• Norwegian name: Elvevannymfe
• Finnish name: Sulkakoipikorento
• Danish name: Fjerbenet vandnymfe
• Italian name: Zampalarga comune
• Czech name: šidélko brvonohé
• Slovenian name: Sinji presličar
• Bulgarian name: Речно шило
Blauwe breedscheenjuffer (Platycnemis pennipes)
Not present
Present before 1990
Present after 1990
Present before and after 1990
Present after 2015

Map data based on J.-P. Boudot & V. J. Kalkman (eds.),
Atlas of the European Dragonflies and Damselflies
General | • a fairly large species which is very common and widespread throughout Europe except Iberia and large parts of the British Isles and Scandinavia | |
Classification | • suborder: Zygoptera (damselflies); family: Platycnemididae | |
Conservation status | • IUCN Red List Europe: Least Concern | |
Scientific name | • Platycnemis pennipes (Pallas, 1771) | |
Distribution | • click or tap the Map button above | |
Habitat | • all types of still and slow-flowing running waters | |
Dimensions | • typical body length: 35-37 mm; hindwing: 19-23 mm | |
Both sexes | Thorax | ➤ the thorax typically bears a double antehumeral stripe |
Wings | • the pterostigma is uniformly golden brown | |
Legs | • the shins, especially on the middle and hind legs and especially in males of the subspecies P. p. nitidula, are strikingly white and wide | |
Male | Head | • the eyes are blue in mature males but brown in immature males |
Thorax | • the thorax is light blue in mature males (white/beige in immature males) | |
Abdomen | ➤ the abdomen is light blue in mature males (white/beige in immature males) | |
• the lower appendages are clearly longer than the upper appendages | ||
Female | Head | • the eyes are brown |
Thorax | • the thorax is beige/brown | |
Abdomen | • the abdomen is beige/brown | |
Photographs | • the photos we made in Italy show the nominal subspecies P. p. pennipes | |
• the photos we made in Greece show the subspecies P. p. nitidula |