Image copyright dave kitching Image caption The white-faced darter dragonfly was last recorded in Cheshire in 2003

A project to reintroduce a rare dragonfly to Cheshire has had "a successful start", a wildlife trust has said.

The white-faced darter dragonfly was last recorded in the county in 2003.

Cheshire Wildlife Trust (CWT) have placed 100 larvae into pools in Delamere Forest in the hope that they will thrive.

It is only the second time a dragonfly reintroduction has been attempted, following a project in Cumbria in 2010.

'Long-term hope'

The dragonfly, which CWT said was "one of the UK's rarest", is only found in Cumbria, Staffordshire, Shropshire and Scotland.

The Cheshire project saw larvae collected from healthy populations in pools in Shropshire and Staffordshire and relocated to the forest.

White-faced darter dragonfly The white-faced darter is a small dark dragonfly, with a pale creamy white frons

The male has a narrow black abdomen, marked with red and orange. The female is patterned the same but yellow replaces the red

The species is threatened by habitat destruction and fragmentation, pollution and the impact of people visiting inhabited sites Source: British Dragonfly Society

Dr Vicky Nall, who led the project, said it had been a "tense" time for her team, as they waited to see the "first tentative emergence of the darters and begin the painstaking process of counting the dried larval cases they leave behind".

However, she said that because "we've been blessed with a relatively consistent warm and sunny spring so far, the signs are good for a successful number of adults making their way into the air this year".

The scheme has seen Delamere Forest's managers, the Forestry Commission, remove trees that cast shadows across the open pools the insects require.

A CWT spokesman said the "long-term hope is that habitats in the forest may be adapted to allow the dragonflies to expand into additional areas".