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Aquatic Insect Orders

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Notonectidae: Backswimmers Corixidae: Water Boatmen Naucoridae: Creeping water bugs Gerridae: Water striders Hemiptera Left: Nepidae (water scorpions) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aquatic Insect Orders


1
Aquatic Insect Orders
2
Aquatic Insects
  • Insects are largely terrestrial.
  • But there have been numerous colonizations of the
    freshwater aquatic environment.
  • Far fewer colonizations of marine aquatic
    environment.

3
Aquatic Insects
  • Some lineages have almost exclusively aquatic
    naiads.
  • Ephemeroptera
  • Odonata
  • Plecoptera (the only aquatic Polyneoptera)
  • All of these have terrestrial adults.

4
Habitats for aquatic insects
  • Lotic flowing water
  • Influenced strongly by velocity of flow
  • Particle size
  • Substrate type
  • Inputs from outside and local nutrient supplies
  • Lentic standing water
  • Often strong zonation
  • Limnetic zone- penetrated by light
  • Profundal zone- deeper zone w/o much light

5
Oxygen Supplies
  • Air 200,000 ppm (20)
  • Lotic environments (15 ppm)
  • Depends on O2 production/consumption by plants
  • Affected by turbulence and water quality
  • Lentic environments
  • Oxygen levels vary with temperature, salinity,
    and depth
  • Turbulence affects nutrient and oxygen
    distribution
  • Anoxic
  • No oxygen present

6
How do aquatic insects obtain oxygen?
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Keep part of body out of water
  • Carry oxygen into water
  • Aqueous oxygen
  • Specialized tracheal systems

7
Tracheal System
8
Closed Tracheal System
  • Gills- lamellar extensions of tracheal system
  • Found in many insect orders
  • Gills may be in many places
  • Base of legs
  • Abdomen
  • End of abdomen
  • How is this analogous to insect ears?

9
Open tracheal system in flies
  • Respiratory siphons near abdomen or thorax
  • Different location in mosquito pupa than larva

10
Open tracheal system in diving beetles
  • Bubble stored beneath elytra
  • Gas exchange can occur in water

11
Other air bubble gills
  • Water kept away from body through hairs or
    mesh
  • Oxygen diffuses from water to air against body
  • Usually slow moving insects with low oxygen demand

12
Lotic Adaptations
  • Flattened bodies
  • Attachment through suckers

Water pennies (Coleoptera Psephenidae)
Net-winged midges (Diptera Blephariceridae
13
More Lotic Adaptations
  • Nets Cases

Trichoptera net
Trichoptera cases
14
Lentic Adaptations
  • Taking advantage of surface tension of still water

Water Strider (Gerridae)
Whirligig Beetle (Gyrinidae)
15
Adaptations to nearly anoxic environments
  • Hemoglobins
  • Many larval chironomid midges (Diptera)
    bloodworms
  • Very, very high affinity for oxygen (unlike us)

16
Using insects to monitor aquatic environments
  • Usefulness
  • Diverse taxa to choose from, many common
  • Functionally important to ecological community
  • Ease of sampling many individuals without major
    ethical constraints
  • Ability to identify species
  • Responses
  • Increases of certain taxa in waters with
    sediment, low
  • Oxygen, increases in temperature
  • Loss of diversity with pollution and or
    eutrophication

17
Ephemeroptera
  • Naiads often with abdominal gills
  • Also maxillary and labial gills!
  • Generally 3 styli on naiads and adults.
  • As many as 45 instars
  • Anything else?

18
Odonata
  • Dragonflies Damselflies
  • Rectal/anal internal gills.
  • Caudal lamellae also serve as gills.
  • Up to 20 instars.
  • Predators as naiads and adults.

19
Plecoptera
  • Mostly temperate regions
  • 10-33 instars
  • Closed tracheal system with anal gills.
  • Need high oxygen, good environmental indicators.

20
Hemiptera True Bugs
Notonectidae Backswimmers
  • Diving or at surface
  • Adults and naiads both aquatic.
  • Highly modified legs.
  • Generally wings still functional as adults, can
    disperse between waterways.

Corixidae Water Boatmen
Naucoridae Creeping water bugs
Gerridae Water striders
21
Hemiptera
  • Left Nepidae (water scorpions) tails are
    breathing tubes
  • Right Belostomatidae (toe-biters) egg tending by
    males

22
Trichoptera
  • Case net makers.
  • Abdominal tracheal gills.

23
Coleoptera
  • Aquatic larvae, aquatic adults
  • Aquatic larvae, terrestrial adults
  • Terrestrial larvae, aquatic adults
  • Pretty much all pupate on land

24
Diptera
  • Often with anal spiracles breathing at surface
  • Very diverse
  • Almost all disease vectoring Diptera have aquatic
    larvae (?)

25
Megaloptera Neuroptera
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