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Biology

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Adults are found in May and June (1); they are weak fliers and last for just two to three days, during which time they do not feed (4). The emergence of adults is synchronised, so that large numbers of both sexes are present at the same time. Mating occurs at night, and females lay very large batches of eggs on plants that overhang the water. A number of females may choose to lay their eggs on the same plant, which may become covered in large expanses of alderfly eggs (4). After hatching, the predacious larvae fall into the water where they crawl around in search of food; they take other insects, small invertebrates and worms (4). After 1-2 years of development, the larva leaves the water, and digs into the soil or waterside debris to pupate. Two to three weeks later the adults emerge (2).
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Conservation

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Not relevant.
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Description

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Alderflies are fairly primitive insects, and were the first insect group to develop a pupal stage (4). The robust body is brown or black, with two pairs of brown or grey wings, which are folded back over the body when at rest and feature dark veins. The larvae are aquatic and have large heads with powerful jaws; there are three pairs of legs and then a pair of limb-like feathery gills on each segment of the body, except the very last segment which is tipped with a long spike-like gill (3).
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Habitat

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Adults are found close to ponds and slow-flowing streams where there is plenty of silt. The aquatic larvae live in mud and detritus (1).
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Range

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This widespread species is the commonest alderfly in Britain (1).
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Status

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Common and widespread (1).
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Threats

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This species is not threatened at present.
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Sialis lutaria

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Sialis lutaria, common name alderfly, is a species of alderfly belonging to the order Megaloptera family Sialidae.[1]

Distribution

This species is mainly present in Austria, Belgium, United Kingdom, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Poland, Romania and Switzerland.[2]

Habitat

Adults of this species usually inhabits ponds and slow-flowing streams, while the larvae live in mud and detritus under water.[3]

Description

Dorsal view

Adults can reach 20 millimetres (0.79 in) of length, with a wingspan of 22–34 millimetres (0.87–1.34 in).[4] They have a stocky body with a black or dark brown basic coloration, including head and legs. The wings are greyish, membranous and translucent, with pronounced dark venation. At rest they are held roof-like over their body.[3]

The flat larvae reach approximately 17 millimetres (0.67 in).[5] They have large heads, powerful jaws and three pairs of legs. Furthermore they show feathery gills on the abdominal segments. The abdomen terminates with a long gill.[3][4]

Biology

Adults are most often encountered from May through June on vegetation near slow-flowing streams or close to ponds. They are bad fliers and never leave the waters where the larvae have developed.

Females lay a large quantity of eggs on plants overhanging the waters, where larvae will fall after hatching. Larvae are aquatic predators of small invertebrates and usually wait for their prey in silt or under stones just emerging from the water. The life cycle in this species lasts about one-two years, but the adults live two-three days only, without feeding.[5][6][7]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Biolib
  2. ^ Fauna Europaea
  3. ^ a b c "Arkive". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2011-05-06.
  4. ^ a b Olsen, L., Sunesen, J., & Pedersen, B. V. (1999) Small freshwater creatures. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  5. ^ a b Macan, T. T. (1959) A guide to freshwater invertebrate animals. Longmans, Green & Co Ltd., London.
  6. ^ O'Tool, C. (2002) The new encyclopedia of insects and their allies. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  7. ^ Giani, N., & Laville, H. (1973, January). Cycle biologique et production de Sialis lutaria L.(Megaloptera) dans le lac de Port-Bielh (Pyrenees Centrales). In Annales de Limnologie-International Journal of Limnology (Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 45-61). EDP Sciences
  • Xingyue Liu, Fumio Hayashi and Ding Yang (2009). "Sialis navasi, a new alderfly species from China (Megaloptera: Sialidae)". Zootaxa. 2230: 64–68.

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Sialis lutaria: Brief Summary

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Sialis lutaria, common name alderfly, is a species of alderfly belonging to the order Megaloptera family Sialidae.

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