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or Aquatic Macroinvertebrates

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1 or Aquatic Macroinvertebrates
Aquatic Insects or Aquatic Macroinvertebrates

2 Classification Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods) Class Insecta (Insects)

3 What it Means "Aquatic" means water
"macro" means big (or big enough for us to see without using a microscope) "invertebrate" means without a backbone

4 Importance of Provide food for other insects, birds, fish, and mammals
Help scientists determine species biodiversity which can aid in determining water quality

5 History Insects first showed up in our rock record during the late Silurian Period ~ mya These included terrestrial myriapods of which millipedes are part of Aquatic species, such as nymphs and adult stoneflies and mayflies have also found then

6 Named By the Way They Eat
Shredders- are herbivores and/or detritivores that specialize in larger items which are broken into smaller pieces Collectors- are herbivores and/or detritivores that gather already broken down food items Scrapers- “ “ that eat very small particles, often algae that are attached to surfaces Predators- are carnivores that eat live animals, either whole, in part, or by piercing them and sucking out their fluids

7 Mayflies Order- Ephemeroptera
Name of the order comes from either the ephemeral quality of the adult insects or the name Ephemeroptera is derived from the Greek "ephemera" meaning short-lived, and "ptera" meaning wings.

8 Unique in the Insect World
Only insect to go through two winged stages Others insects only molt once The two adult or winged stages are: -Subimagoes (duns) -Imagoes (spinners)

9 Life Cycle

10 Incomplete Metamorphosis
1. Egg matures into a nymph.    2. The nymph lives on the bottom growing in stages called instars* until it matures.    3. The mature nymph (emerger) swims to the surface.    4. Sheds it's husk becoming a dun, (subimago) and floats along the surface until it's wings are dry enough to take flight. In the insect world this subimago stage is unique to Mayflies. That is insects that are fully winged before the adult stage.    5. The dun flies into the bushes, or trees along the river bank, where it sheds it's skin becoming an adult, (spinner), (imago).    6. The spinner leaves the trees, or bushes to begin the mating swarm.    7. The female spinner dips her eggs on the waters surface, and they fall to the streams bottom.    8. After mating both male, and female spinners fall to the waters surface, and die.

11 Spinners  ”Males appear first beginning the mating ritual high above the water. They flutter and dance in an effort to attract a female. Soon females appear, diving into the swarm to pick out a mate. As mating progresses the swarm falls closer, and closer to the waters surface. Fluttering through the air males hold females in place with their claspers. With the mating process complete females, leave the males, and begin depositing their eggs on the water. Exhausted, males begin falling into the water. They struggle to stay alive for a time, holding their wings upright, but soon fall flat on surface. After depositing their eggs females soon follow.”

12 Nymph Body Parts

13

14 Clingers- Family Heptageniidae

15 Swimmers- Family Baetidae

16 Burrowers- Family Ephemeridae

17 Adult Mayfly Body Parts

18 Caddisflies- Order Trichoptera
Also known as sedges, especially in England There are over 1200 species in North America and that is double that of mayflies Experience Complete Metamorphosis - Egg larva pupa adult

19 Life Cycle Have ~ a one-year life cycle Go through 5 instar* stages
* Instar- shedding of exoskeleton as invertebrate grows

20 Complete Metamorphism (Holometaboly)
Evolution of this adaptation occurred during the Upper Carboniferous Period ~ 290 mya With the evolution of the pupal stage, organisms could focus energy energy on the development of adult organs and structures whereas during incomplete metamorphism, nymphs have to spend energy on foraging for food

21 Stages of Development

22 1. Egg matures into larva.    2. The larva lives on the bottom growing in stages called instars* (typically five) until it matures. Some types of caddis like Rhyacophila are free living, and don't build cases until the pupal stage, other free living caddis like Hydropsychidae that build retreats near their catch nets. Others build portable cases, and abandon them, building new ones as they grow. A. A free living caddis. B. Caddis larva with a portable case. C. A free living caddis in it's retreat near it's catch net.    3. The larva then either seals it's case, or retreat, or builds a case where it pupates (undergoes metamorphosis).    4. The mature pupa cuts itself free from it's case and swims or crawls to the surface, where it sheds it's pupal membrane, and emerges as an adult.    5. The adult caddis flies into the trees, and bushes along the stream where it stays for two or three days.    Mating takes place either on the ground or in the trees, and vegetation along the stream. Mating gets underway as adults begin swarming in, and around a tree, or bush. This activity signals the beginning of the mating swarm, with the adult caddis using the bush, or tree as a landmark, or focal point to gather.

23 6. Females fly off to deposit their eggs.
   7. Methods of egg laying (ovipositing). D. On bushes and trees overhanging the stream, where rain will wash the eggs into the water. E. On the stream surface. F. Above the stream surface. G. Swimming or crawling to the stream bottom.    8. Unlike Mayflies after ovipositing adult Caddisflies don't die right away, but fly off to live for a varying length of time.

24 Larvae

25 Free-Living- Genus Rhyacophila (Green Rock Worm)
Body and wing colors will darken when the insect is ready to lay eggs.

26 Case Builders- Genus Glossosoma

27 Net Spinners- family Hydropsychidae

28 Body Parts

29 Adult

30 Stoneflies- Order Plecoptera
Greek plektos 'twisted' + pteron 'wing'; refers to the folded posterior region of the resting hind wing

31 Importance Of “nymphs of most species develop in cool, well-oxygenated water and do not tolerate pollution; therefore, their presence is an indicator of good water quality, and their absence in areas where they previously occurred may indicate pollution”

32 Emergence/Hatching Season
“adults of most species emerge during late spring and summer; however, the so-called "winter" stoneflies emerge and reproduce during the fall and coldest parts of the winter”

33 What they eat “nymphs feed on algae, diatoms, mosses, and immature aquatic invertebrates, including mayflies and midges; most spring and summer adults do not feed, and are nocturnal; winter stoneflies are day-flying, and feed on blue-green algae and foliage”

34 Life Cycle Summary “females deposit several egg masses, which together may total more than 1,000 eggs, by flying over water or occasionally by crawling up to the water; some nymphs are known to molt times, and require one to three years to mature; full-grown nymphs leave the water, cling to shoreline vegetation and debris, and molt into the adult stage.”

35 Life Cycle ://

36 Life Cycle ”1. Egg matures into a nymph.
   2. The nymph lives on the bottom growing in stages called instars* until it matures. Depending on species maturity takes from three months to three years.    3. As the nymph nears maturity it migrates to the edge of the stream.    4. The nymph crawls out of the water, and up into the streamside vegetation, usually at night. Males usually emerge prior to the females. Here in the streamside vegetation the final instar is completed as the stonefly sheds it's husk becoming an adult. The adult stoneflies life span varies from a day or two to a few weeks.    5. Adult Stoneflies mate either within the vegetation or on the ground.    6. Females fly out over the stream to deposit eggs.    7. Female Stoneflies drop their egg sack into the water either by dropping it from above the stream surface, dipping their abdomen into the water's surface, while flying above it, or crawling across it. Some species crawl down the bank and deposit their eggs under the water.    8. The eggs drop to the stream bottom. “

37 “Golden Stones”

38 Golden Stonefly

39 “Yellow Sallies”

40 Little Yellow Stoneflies (Yellow Sallies)

41 Brown Stonefly

42 Imitation is key

43 http://www. danica. com/flytier/dbeamish/golden_stonefly_nymph_dark

44 “True Flies”- Order Diptera
Midges are considered “true flies” The name Diptera is derived from the Greek words "di" meaning two and "ptera" meaning wings

45 Midges- Family Chironomidae or Ceratopogonidae
Chironomidae- “Non-biting midges” do not bite, suck blood, or carry disease -ex. Chrominids Ceratopogonidae-“Biting midges” Pierce skin, suck blood, and can carry disease -ex.- “no see-ums” and “sand flies”

46 Extremely Important Insects
Find them present in water and in air at all times of the year Can tolerate some of the poorest water conditions

47 Biting Midge

48 Non-biting Midge

49 Chrominoid Larvae and Pupae

50 Emergence into Adult

51 Life Cycle Larva

52 Life Cycle Explained

53 Works Cited Pictures-


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