Fortunately there was a convenient arrow pointing out the bird otherwise I would never have seen it! :)
looked like 2 different sp. mating they flew around, the female more like a common gliders wing and tail but all brown. Only barely managed this shot when they touched down.
Some heavily cropped shots of the male terminalia included. Form of the superior appendages is hard to make out but the inferior appendages are moderately elongate and slender without a hooked apex (in lateral view) and appear to be divergent in dorsal view, excluding L. brevicauda and most consistent with L. conjuncta. Form of the basal wing venation eliminates L. barbarae as a contender.
Dragonfly
Identified as Nannophya paulsoni on Bowerbird by Reiner Richter: "Male. Going on size and color I think its Nannophya paulsoni but you probably need a good shot of the wings veins to be sure."
Cairns Botanic Gardens; red arrow perhaps
The male Orthetrum sabina caught a female Orthetrum caledonicum but they weren't in tandem for long.
Sighting and photos (c) just_science.
I didn't get close to this female because I was scared the water was too deep (turns out it was "only" hip-height). I think the males were bright red and I got some ordinary photos there a couple of days later.
Sighting and photos (c) cwpaine.
Dragonfly 1 Darebin Parklands 29-11-16
Black headed skimmer Dragonfly female
Identified as Diplacodes haematodes on Bowerbird by Ken Walker: "Identification done by Ian Endersby."
Dragonflies & Damselflies of the Top End.
Sighting and photos (c) chelonajill.
Field Notes - Kommo Toera Trail, melaleuca wetland, small beetle approx 1cm long
Female Flame-headed Riverdamsel
I need some help with this one - I don't know what the species is
first time for a caterpillar!