Insects include the greatest number of species of any class of animals. They have been divided into thirty Orders. However only four Orders of insects consist of species whose larval forms are always aquatic, while another nine Orders contain some species with either aquatic larvae or which are aquatic throughout larval and adult stages. Insects are characteried by a hard, segmented, exoskeleton and by a three segmented thorax, each bearing a pair of legs and usually with two pairs of wings attached to the second and third thoracic segments. In the Diptera and some mayflies (Ephemeroptera) the wings are reduced to a single pair, while in primitive insects such as springtails and silver fish, wings are absent. They have also been...
Aquatic insects can be found in essentially all types of water, from the largest lakes and rivers to...
The study of insects has been a hobby for me for more than twenty years. Their diversity and adaptat...
This article is intended primarily to call attention to an almost entirely neglected field of entomo...
(excerpt) The immature forms of many benthic insect species are presently either undescribed or unid...
Aquatic insects act as a major important tool for the bio-indication of environmental disturbances. ...
Insects have successfully inhabited all freshwater habitats on Earth and are often the most diverse ...
Insects now comprise over 75% of all described animal species and exhibit not only a rich variety of...
More than any other group of macro-organisms, true flies (Diptera) dominate the freshwater environme...
With their incredible diversity (∼12,000 species) and abundance throughout a myriad of aquatic habit...
Citation: Gahan, Arthur B. Modifications adaptive to an aquatic habitat in the Coleoptera. Senior th...
The aquatic larvae of the Diptera are often the most abundant and most diverse group of the benthic ...
Megaloptera belong to a large monophyletic group, the Neuropteroidea, together with Coleoptera, Stre...
The order Odonata includes all insects known as dragon-flies in the broad sense of the term. The adu...
The study of insect populations is dominated by research on terrestrial insects. Are aquatic insect ...
Until now, only fully winged mayflies have been known. It has been proposed recently that brachypter...
Aquatic insects can be found in essentially all types of water, from the largest lakes and rivers to...
The study of insects has been a hobby for me for more than twenty years. Their diversity and adaptat...
This article is intended primarily to call attention to an almost entirely neglected field of entomo...
(excerpt) The immature forms of many benthic insect species are presently either undescribed or unid...
Aquatic insects act as a major important tool for the bio-indication of environmental disturbances. ...
Insects have successfully inhabited all freshwater habitats on Earth and are often the most diverse ...
Insects now comprise over 75% of all described animal species and exhibit not only a rich variety of...
More than any other group of macro-organisms, true flies (Diptera) dominate the freshwater environme...
With their incredible diversity (∼12,000 species) and abundance throughout a myriad of aquatic habit...
Citation: Gahan, Arthur B. Modifications adaptive to an aquatic habitat in the Coleoptera. Senior th...
The aquatic larvae of the Diptera are often the most abundant and most diverse group of the benthic ...
Megaloptera belong to a large monophyletic group, the Neuropteroidea, together with Coleoptera, Stre...
The order Odonata includes all insects known as dragon-flies in the broad sense of the term. The adu...
The study of insect populations is dominated by research on terrestrial insects. Are aquatic insect ...
Until now, only fully winged mayflies have been known. It has been proposed recently that brachypter...
Aquatic insects can be found in essentially all types of water, from the largest lakes and rivers to...
The study of insects has been a hobby for me for more than twenty years. Their diversity and adaptat...
This article is intended primarily to call attention to an almost entirely neglected field of entomo...