Sapphire Bluet, Africallagma sapphirinum, Saffierbloutjie. 
Family Coenagrionidae Kirby, 1890
Short Description:
Sapphire Bluet, Africallagma sapphirinum, Saffierbloutjie is small sized, sapphire blue with black rings on abdomen segments 3 to segment 5.
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Key identification features:
Male:
Face is sapphire blue and black. The labrum is light blue and the postclypeus black. Top of the head is black. Postocular spots are sapphire blue and linked with a thin blue line.- Eyes are bright blue with black cap.

Synthorax is blue. Middorsal stripes of the synthorax are shiny black with blue antihumeral stripes and thin black humeral stripes on either side.
Sides of the synthorax are blue.- Wings are clear and the pterostigmas are dark grey to black with pale border.
Abdomen is deep sapphire blue and black.
Segments one to five are mainly sapphire-blue with a discontinuous black dorsal stripe. The dorsal stripe forms distinct ring-shaped black markings in S3 - S5. The S6, S7 and S10 are mostly black. S 8 and S9 are sapphire blue
Female:
- Dull blue with thin black humeral stripes. Blue postocular spots. Abdomen light brown below with similarly dorsal markings as the male.
Habitat:
- Its natural habitat is standing waters, pools, dams and still parts of streams and rivers with floating and semi-submerged aquatic vegetation.
- From 900 to 2100 m above sea level, but possibly up to 2700.
Behaviour:
- Perch close to the water on plant stems and flies just above the water surface.
Compared with other species:
- Africallagma sapphirinum has distinctive bright sapphire blue colour.
- Distinctive black rings on S3-5 of the abdomen. A. sapphirinum has dark grey to black pterostigmas and normal wingtips and the Proischnura rotundipennis has round blue and black pterostigmas and round wingtips.
Distribution:
South Africa
- It is endemic to South Africa.

- Found in the grassland highveld of central South Africa.
Further reading:
Websites of interest:
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (Least Concern)
Odonata Atlas of Africa VMU Number 662370
A Visual Guide to the Damselflies and Dragonflies of South Africa








