Articles
Dragonflies: Designed to Dart!
by Denis Dreves
The dragonfly’s
marvellous ability to dart sideways, upwards, hover, and instantly
change direction, is due to impressive design
features. The creature has two sets of many-veined, long, rigid wings
which beat alternately. (When one set is up, the other is down.)
This gives it excellent aerodynamic efficiency, and the independent
operation of each wing provides precise flight control. The wings
beat 1,600 or more times a minute.
Not surprisingly,
the muscles which operate a dragonfly’s
wings comprise about one-quarter of its total weight. These powerful
synchronized wings can propel the insect at speeds estimated at 50
kilometres an hour (30 miles per hour) or more, sometimes for long
distances. Dragonflies have been known to migrate more than 300 kilometres
across water.
Just as amazing
as the dragonfly’s flying ability are its
two large eyes. Though these may make the insect a little scary to
look at, they are a marvel of intricate design by the Creator.
The surface
of each eyeball is faceted with up to 30,000 individual ‘eyes’ called
ommatidia. Each of these units combines a surface lens with an internal
cone-shaped crystalline lens and scans a narrow field of view. These
scanners simultaneously feed data into the brain of the insect, thus
giving the dragonfly multi-image vision and super-sensitive motion
detection. Moving objects pass from the view of one lens to another.
The dragonfly’s ability to rotate its head gives the insect
almost 360-degree vision. It can see moving objects up to 40 metres
(44 yards) away—a long distance for such a small creature.
During its aquatic early life as a nymph, the dragonfly has the
ability to use water drawn into its gills as a form of jet propulsion
if alarmed. Water used for breathing can be expelled in a jet which
drives the nymph forward, rocket-style, for several inches.
Later in its life the insect goes through a remarkable transformation
from a water-breathing creature (with gills) into the beautifully
coloured air-breathing dragonfly with which we are familiar. If it
were held under water in the adult stage it would drown.
On the evolutionists’ time-scale, dragonflies first appear
in the fossil record in the Carboniferous Period (‘300 million
years ago’), before flowering plants or dinosaurs. By evolutionists’ own
admission, dragonflies have not changed much in that ‘long
time’.
Reduced size today
In fact, the only significant change today seems to be their reduced
size. Some fossil dragonflies have a wingspan measuring up to 70
centimetres (28 inches). Today the largest is about 19 centimetres
(7½ inches) and many are considerably smaller.
Evolutionists
are somewhat puzzled that dragonflies could have survived unchanged
for 300 million years. One writes: ‘Dragonflies have
evolved without much alteration during this enormous period of time—a
triumph of evolutionary conservatism in a world where change is usually
synonomous with survival.’1
Not only is
their unchanged survival a problem for the evolution model, but
evolution is believed to proceed from simple forms of
life to complex forms of life over millions of years. Yet we see
remarkable complexity in the dragonfly, which appears fully formed ‘300
million years’ ago by the estimation of those who believe in
evolution.
For a young-earth
(under 10,000 years) creationist, none of these facts is a problem.
Genesis chapter one tells us that God created
all living creatures to reproduce according to their ‘kind’.
We often see variation within a kind, as in the case of the dragonfly.
But of the 5,000 dragonfly species known today, all are clearly dragonflies,
and the fossil record testifies to the fact of ‘no dragon-fly
evolution’.
Some fossil dragonflies are very large, but only their smaller descendants
exist in our present time.
The dragonfly is yet another example of how the facts fit the creation
record of Genesis better than they fit the theory of evolution. Their
marvellous design clearly points to the Creator.
Reference
Robert A. Cannings and Kathleen M. Stuart, The Dragonflies of British
Columbia. British Columbia Provincial Museum, Victoria (BC), 1977,
p. 13.
http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/927/
Used
by permission of Creation Ministries International: wwwcreationontheweb.com
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