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Mayfly

Mayflies (also known as shadflies or fishflies in Canada and the upper Midwestern United States, as Canadian soldiers in the American Great Lakes region,[2] and as up-winged flies in the United Kingdom) are aquatic insects belonging to the order Ephemeroptera. This order is part of an ancient group of insects termed the Palaeoptera, which also contains dragonflies and damselflies. Over 3,000 species of mayfly are known worldwide, grouped into over 400 genera in 42 families.

Mayfly
Temporal range: Late Carboniferous–present[1]
Rhithrogena germanica, the fly fisherman's "March brown mayfly"
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Subclass: Pterygota
Division: Palaeoptera
Superorder: Ephemeropteroidea
Rohdendorf, 1968
Order: Ephemeroptera
Hyatt & Arms, 1891
Suborders

See text

Mayflies have ancestral traits that were probably present in the first flying insects, such as long tails and wings that do not fold flat over the abdomen. Their immature stages are aquatic fresh water forms (called "naiads" or "nymphs"), whose presence indicates a clean, unpolluted and highly oxygenated aquatic environment. They are unique among insect orders in having a fully winged terrestrial preadult stage, the subimago, which moults into a sexually mature adult, the imago.

Mayflies "hatch" (emerge as adults) from spring to autumn, not necessarily in May, in enormous numbers. Some hatches attract tourists. Fly fishermen make use of mayfly hatches by choosing artificial fishing flies that resemble them. One of the most famous English mayflies is Rhithrogena germanica, the fisherman's "March brown mayfly".[3]

The brief lives of mayfly adults have been noted by naturalists and encyclopaedists since Aristotle and Pliny the Elder in classical antiquity. The German engraver Albrecht Dürer included a mayfly in his 1495 engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly to suggest a link between heaven and earth. The English poet George Crabbe compared the brief life of a daily newspaper with that of a mayfly in the satirical poem "The Newspaper" (1785), both being known as "ephemera".

Description

Nymph

 
 
 
Top left: Mayfly nymph, dorsal view, showing the paired gills and three projections on the abdomen; wing buds are visible on the thorax. Top right: Subimago of Leptophlebia marginata. Bottom: Nymph of the mayfly Cloeon dipterum, showing seven pairs of gills along the sides of the abdomen.

Immature mayflies are aquatic and are referred to as nymphs or naiads. In contrast to their short lives as adults, they may live for several years in the water. They have an elongated, cylindrical or somewhat flattened body that passes through a number of instars (stages), molting and increasing in size each time. When ready to emerge from the water, nymphs vary in length, depending on species, from 3 to 30 mm (0.12 to 1.18 in).[4] The head has a tough outer covering of sclerotin, often with various hard ridges and projections; it points either forwards or downwards, with the mouth at the front. There are two large compound eyes, three ocelli (simple eyes) and a pair of antennae of variable lengths, set between or in front of the eyes. The mouthparts are designed for chewing and consist of a flap-like labrum, a pair of strong mandibles, a pair of maxillae, a membranous hypopharynx and a labium.[5]

The thorax consists of three segments – the hindmost two, the mesothorax and metathorax, being fused. Each segment bears a pair of legs which usually terminate in a single claw. The legs are robust and often clad in bristles, hairs or spines. Wing pads develop on the mesothorax, and in some species, hindwing pads develop on the metathorax.[5]

The abdomen consists of ten segments, some of which may be obscured by a large pair of operculate gills, a thoracic shield (expanded part of the prothorax) or the developing wing pads. In most taxa up to seven pairs of gills arise from the top or sides of the abdomen, but in some species they are under the abdomen, and in a very few species the gills are instead located on the coxae of the legs, or the bases of the maxillae. The abdomen terminates in slender thread-like projections, consisting of a pair of cerci, with or without a third central caudal filament.[5]

Subimago

The final moult of the nymph is not to the full adult form, but to a winged stage called a subimago that physically resembles the adult, but which is usually sexually immature and duller in colour. The subimago, or dun,[6] often has partially cloudy wings fringed with minute hairs known as microtrichia; its eyes, legs and genitalia are not fully developed. Females of some mayflies (subfamily Palingeniinae) do not moult from a subimago state into an adult stage and are sexually mature while appearing like a subimago with microtrichia on the wing membrance. Oligoneuriine mayflies form another exception in retaining microtrichia on their wings but not on their bodies. Subimagos are generally poor fliers, have shorter appendages, and typically lack the colour patterns used to attract mates. In males of Ephoron leukon, the subimagos have forelegs that are short and compressed, with accordion like folds, and expands to more than double its length after moulting.[7] After a period, usually lasting one or two days but in some species only a few minutes, the subimago moults to the full adult form, making mayflies the only insects where a winged form undergoes a further moult.[4]

Imago

 
Adult Atalophlebia with the cylindrical dorsal or turban eyes visible

Adult mayflies, or imagos, are relatively primitive in structure, exhibiting traits that were probably present in the first flying insects. These include long tails and wings that do not fold flat over the abdomen.[8] Mayflies are delicate-looking insects with one or two pairs of membranous, triangular wings, which are extensively covered with veins. At rest, the wings are held upright, like those of a butterfly. The hind wings are much smaller than the forewings and may be vestigial or absent. The second segment of the thorax, which bears the forewings, is enlarged to hold the main flight muscles. Adults have short, flexible antennae, large compound eyes, three ocelli and non-functional mouthparts. In most species, the males' eyes are large and the front legs unusually long, for use in locating and grasping females during the mid-air mating. In the males of some families, there are two large cylindrical "turban" eyes (also known as turbanate or turbinate eyes) that face upwards in addition to the lateral eyes.[9] They are capable of detecting ultraviolet light and are thought to be used during courtship to detect females flying above them.[10] In some species all the legs are functionless, apart from the front pair in males. The abdomen is long and roughly cylindrical, with ten segments and two or three long cerci (tail-like appendages) at the tip. Like Entognatha, Archaeognatha and Zygentoma, the spiracles on the abdomen don't have closing muscles.[11][12] Uniquely among insects, mayflies possess paired genitalia, with the male having two aedeagi (penis-like organs) and the female two gonopores (sexual openings).[1][4]

Biology

Reproduction and life cycle

Mayflies are hemimetabolous (they have "incomplete metamorphosis"). They are unique among insects in that they moult one more time after acquiring functional wings;[13] this last-but-one winged (alate) instar usually lives a very short time and is known as a subimago, or to fly fishermen as a dun. Mayflies at the subimago stage are a favourite food of many fish, and many fishing flies are modelled to resemble them. The subimago stage does not survive for long, rarely for more than 24 hours. In some species, it may last for just a few minutes, while the mayflies in the family Palingeniidae have sexually mature subimagos and no true adult form at all.[1]

Often, all the individuals in a population mature at once (a hatch), and for a day or two in the spring or autumn, mayflies are extremely abundant, dancing around each other in large groups, or resting on every available surface.[4] In many species the emergence is synchronised with dawn or dusk, and light intensity seems to be an important cue for emergence, but other factors may also be involved. Baetis intercalaris, for example, usually emerges just after sunset in July and August, but in one year, a large hatch was observed at midday in June. The soft-bodied subimagos are very attractive to predators. Synchronous emergence is probably an adaptive strategy that reduces the individual's risk of being eaten.[14] The lifespan of an adult mayfly is very short, varying with the species. The primary function of the adult is reproduction; adults do not feed and have only vestigial mouthparts, while their digestive systems are filled with air.[13] Dolania americana has the shortest adult lifespan of any mayfly: the adult females of the species live for less than five minutes.[15]

 
Mayflies (known locally as shadflies) swarm briefly in enormous numbers in Ontario.

Male adults may patrol individually, but most congregate in swarms a few metres above water with clear open sky above it, and perform a nuptial or courtship dance. Each insect has a characteristic up-and-down pattern of movement; strong wingbeats propel it upwards and forwards with the tail sloping down; when it stops moving its wings, it falls passively with the abdomen tilted upwards. Females fly into these swarms, and mating takes place in the air. A rising male clasps the thorax of a female from below using his front legs bent upwards, and inseminates her. Copulation may last just a few seconds, but occasionally a pair remains in tandem and flutters to the ground.[16] Males may spend the night in vegetation and return to their dance the following day. Although they do not feed, some briefly touch the surface to drink a little water before flying off.[16]

Females typically lay between four hundred and three thousand eggs. The eggs are often dropped onto the surface of the water; sometimes the female deposits them by dipping the tip of her abdomen into the water during flight, releasing a small batch of eggs each time, or deposits them in bulk while standing next to the water. In a few species, the female submerges and places the eggs among plants or in crevices underwater, but in general, they sink to the bottom. The incubation time is variable, depending at least in part on temperature, and may be anything from a few days to nearly a year. Eggs can go into a quiet dormant phase or diapause.[17] The larval growth rate is also temperature-dependent, as is the number of moults. At anywhere between ten and fifty, these post-embryonic moults are more numerous in mayflies than in most other insect orders. The nymphal stage of mayflies may last from several months to several years, depending on species and environmental conditions.[5]

Around half of all mayfly species whose reproductive biology has been described are parthenogenetic (able to asexually reproduce), including both partially and exclusively parthenogenetic populations and species.[18]

Many species breed in moving water, where there is a tendency for the eggs and nymphs to get washed downstream. To counteract this, females may fly upriver before depositing their eggs. For example, the female Tisza mayfly, the largest European species with a length of 12 cm (4.7 in), flies up to 3 kilometres (2 mi) upstream before depositing eggs on the water surface. These sink to the bottom and hatch after 45 days, the nymphs burrowing their way into the sediment where they spend two or three years before hatching into subimagos.[19]

When ready to emerge, several different strategies are used. In some species, the transformation of the nymph occurs underwater and the subimago swims to the surface and launches itself into the air.[4] In other species, the nymph rises to the surface, bursts out of its skin, remains quiescent for a minute or two resting on the exuviae (cast skin) and then flies upwards, and in some, the nymph climbs out of the water before transforming.[20]

Ecology

 
Rainbow trout are among the main predators of mayflies.

Nymphs live primarily in streams under rocks, in decaying vegetation or in sediments. Few species live in lakes, but they are among the most prolific. For example, the emergence of one species of Hexagenia was recorded on Doppler weather radar by the shoreline of Lake Erie in 2003.[21] In the nymphs of most mayfly species, the paddle-like gills do not function as respiratory surfaces because sufficient oxygen is absorbed through the integument, instead serving to create a respiratory current. However, in low-oxygen environments such as the mud at the bottom of ponds in which Ephemera vulgata burrows, the filamentous gills act as true accessory respiratory organs and are used in gaseous exchange.[22]

In most species, the nymphs are herbivores or detritivores, feeding on algae, diatoms or detritus, but in a few species, they are predators of chironomid and other small insect larvae and nymphs.[23][24] Nymphs of Povilla burrow into submerged wood and can be a problem for boat owners in Asia.[25] Some are able to shift from one feeding group to another as they grow, thus enabling them to utilise a variety of food resources. They process a great quantity of organic matter as nymphs and transfer a lot of phosphates and nitrates to terrestrial environments when they emerge from the water, thus helping to remove pollutants from aqueous systems.[5] Along with caddisfly larvae and gastropod molluscs, the grazing of mayfly nymphs has a significant impact on the primary producers, the plants and algae, on the bed of streams and rivers.[26]

The nymphs are eaten by a wide range of predators and form an important part of the aquatic food chain. Fish are among the main predators, picking nymphs off the bottom or ingesting them in the water column, and feeding on emerging nymphs and adults on the water surface. Carnivorous stonefly, caddisfly, alderfly and dragonfly larvae feed on bottom-dwelling mayfly nymphs, as do aquatic beetles, leeches, crayfish and amphibians.[27] Besides the direct mortality caused by these predators, the behaviour of their potential prey is also affected, with the nymphs' growth rate being slowed by the need to hide rather than feed.[26] The nymphs are highly susceptible to pollution and can be useful in the biomonitoring of water bodies.[4] Once they have emerged, large numbers are preyed on by birds, bats and by other insects, such as Rhamphomyia longicauda.[5]

Mayfly nymphs may serve as hosts for parasites such as nematodes and trematodes. Some of these affect the nymphs' behaviour in such a way that they become more likely to be predated.[28][29] Other nematodes turn adult male mayflies into quasi-females which haunt the edges of streams, enabling the parasites to break their way out into the aqueous environment they need to complete their life cycles.[30] The nymphs can also serve as intermediate hosts for the horsehair worm Paragordius varius, which causes its definitive host, a grasshopper, to jump into water and drown.[31]

Effects on ecosystem functioning

Mayflies are involved in both primary production and bioturbation. A study in laboratory simulated streams revealed that the mayfly genus Centroptilum increased the export of periphyton,[32] thus indirectly affecting primary production positively, which is an essential process for ecosystems. The mayfly can also reallocate and alter the nutrient availability in aquatic habitats through the process of bioturbation. By burrowing in the bottom of lakes and redistributing nutrients, mayflies indirectly regulate phytoplankton and epibenthic primary production.[33] Once burrowing to the bottom of the lake, mayfly nymphs begin to billow their respiratory gills. This motion creates current that carries food particles through the burrow and allows the nymph to filter feed. Other mayfly nymphs possess elaborate filter feeding mechanisms like that of the genus Isonychia. The nymph have forelegs that contain long bristle-like structures that have two rows of hairs. Interlocking hairs form the filter by which the insect traps food particles. The action of filter feeding has a small impact on water purification but an even larger impact on the convergence of small particulate matter into matter of a more complex form that goes on to benefit consumers later in the food chain.[34]

Distribution

Mayflies are distributed all over the world in clean freshwater habitats,[35] though absent from Antarctica.[36] They tend to be absent from oceanic islands or represented by one or two species that have dispersed from nearby mainland. Female mayflies may be dispersed by wind, and eggs may be transferred by adhesion to the legs of waterbirds.[37] The greatest generic diversity is found in the Neotropical realm, while the Holarctic has a smaller number of genera but a high degree of speciation. Some thirteen families are restricted to a single bioregion.[38] The main families have some general habitat preferences: the Baetidae favour warm water; the Heptageniidae live under stones and prefer fast-flowing water; and the relatively large Ephemeridae make burrows in sandy lake or river beds.[35]

Conservation

The nymph is the dominant life history stage of the mayfly. Different insect species vary in their tolerance to water pollution, but in general, the larval stages of mayflies, stoneflies (Plecoptera) and caddis flies (Trichoptera) are susceptible to a number of pollutants including sewage, pesticides and industrial effluent. In general, mayflies are particularly sensitive to acidification, but tolerances vary, and certain species are exceptionally tolerant to heavy metal contamination and to low pH levels. Ephemerellidae are among the most tolerant groups and Siphlonuridae and Caenidae the least. The adverse effects on the insects of pollution may be either lethal or sub-lethal, in the latter case resulting in altered enzyme function, poor growth, changed behaviour or lack of reproductive success. As important parts of the food chain, pollution can cause knock-on effects to other organisms; a dearth of herbivorous nymphs can cause overgrowth of algae, and a scarcity of predacious nymphs can result in an over-abundance of their prey species.[39] Fish that feed on mayfly nymphs that have bioaccumulated heavy metals are themselves at risk.[40] Adult female mayflies find water by detecting the polarization of reflected light. They are easily fooled by other polished surfaces which can act as traps for swarming mayflies.[10]

The threat to mayflies applies also to their eggs. "Modest levels" of pollution in rivers in England are sufficient to kill 80% of mayfly eggs, which are as vulnerable to pollutants as other life-cycle stages; numbers of the blue-winged olive mayfly (Baetis) have fallen dramatically, almost to none in some rivers. The major pollutants thought to be responsible are fine sediment and phosphate from agriculture and sewage.[41]

The status of many species of mayflies is unknown because they are known from only the original collection data. Four North American species are believed to be extinct. Among these, Pentagenia robusta was originally collected from the Ohio River near Cincinnati, but this species has not been seen since its original collection in the 1800s. Ephemera compar is known from a single specimen, collected from the "foothills of Colorado" in 1873, but despite intensive surveys of the Colorado mayflies reported in 1984, it has not been rediscovered.[42]

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list of threatened species includes one mayfly: Tasmanophlebi lacuscoerulei, the large blue lake mayfly, which is a native of Australia and is listed as endangered because its alpine habitat is vulnerable to climate change.[43]

Taxonomy and phylogeny

 
Fossil adult Mickoleitia longimanus (Coxoplectoptera: Mickoleitiidae) from the Lower Cretaceous Crato Formation of Brazil, c. 108 mya
 
Mayfly nymphs belonging to the genus Prosopistoma, the only living genus in the Prosopistomatidae.

As of 2012, over 3,000 species of mayfly in 42 families and over 400 genera are known worldwide,[44][45] including about 630 species in North America.[46] Mayflies are an ancient group of winged (pterygote) insects. Putative fossil stem group representatives (e.g. Syntonopteroidea-like Lithoneura lameerrei) are already known from the late Carboniferous.[47] The name Ephemeroptera is from the Greek ἐφήμερος, ephemeros "short-lived" (literally "lasting a day", cf. English "ephemeral"), and πτερόν, pteron, "wing", referring to the brief lifespan of adults. The English common name is for the insect's emergence in or around the month of May in the UK.[48] The name shadfly is from the Atlantic fish the shad, which runs up American East Coast rivers at the same time as many mayflies emerge.[49][50]

From the Permian, numerous stem group representatives of mayflies are known, which are often lumped into a separate taxon Permoplectoptera (e.g. including Protereisma permianum in the Protereismatidae,[47] and Misthodotidae). The larvae of Permoplectoptera still had 9 pairs of abdominal gills, and the adults still had long hindwings. Maybe the fossil family Cretereismatidae from the Lower Cretaceous Crato Formation of Brazil also belongs as the last offshoot to Permoplectoptera. The Crato outcrops otherwise yielded fossil specimens of modern mayfly families or the extinct (but modern) family Hexagenitidae. However, from the same locality the strange larvae and adults of the extinct family Mickoleitiidae (order Coxoplectoptera) have been described,[51] which represents the fossil sister group of modern mayflies, even though they had very peculiar adaptations such as raptorial forelegs.

The oldest mayfly inclusion in amber is Cretoneta zherichini (Leptophlebiidae) from the Lower Cretaceous of Siberia. In the much younger Baltic amber numerous inclusions of several modern families of mayflies have been found (Ephemeridae, Potamanthidae, Leptophlebiidae, Ametropodidae, Siphlonuridae, Isonychiidae, Heptageniidae, and Ephemerellidae).[52] The modern genus Neoephemera is represented in the fossil record by the Ypresian[53] species N. antiqua from Washington state.[54]

Grimaldi and Engel, reviewing the phylogeny in 2005, commented that many cladistic studies had been made with no stability in Ephemeroptera suborders and infraorders; the traditional division into Schistonota and Pannota was wrong because Pannota is derived from the Schistonota.[47] The phylogeny of the Ephemeroptera was first studied using molecular analysis by Ogden and Whiting in 2005. They recovered the Baetidae as sister to the other clades.[55] Mayfly phylogeny was further studied using morphological and molecular analyses by Ogden and others in 2009. They found that the Asian genus Siphluriscus was sister to all other mayflies. Some existing lineages such as Ephemeroidea, and families such as Ameletopsidae, were found not to be monophyletic, through convergence among nymphal features.[56]

The following traditional classification is based on Peters and Campbell (1991), in Insects of Australia.[57]

Phylogeny

After[18]

In human culture

In art

The Dutch Golden Age author Augerius Clutius (Outgert Cluyt) illustrated some mayflies in his 1634 De Hemerobio ("On the Mayfly"), the earliest book written on the group. Maerten de Vos similarly illustrated a mayfly in his 1587 depiction of the fifth day of creation, amongst an assortment of fish and water birds.[58][59]

In 1495 Albrecht Dürer included a mayfly in his engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly.[60] The critics Larry Silver and Pamela H. Smith argue that the image provides "an explicit link between heaven and earth ... to suggest a cosmic resonance between sacred and profane, celestial and terrestrial, macrocosm and microcosm."[61]

Mayfly in art

In literature

The Ancient Greek biologist and philosopher Aristotle wrote in his History of Animals that

Bloodless and many footed animals, whether furnished with wings or feet, move with more than four points of motion; as, for instance, the dayfly (ephemeron) moves with four feet and four wings: and, I may observe in passing, this creature is exceptional not only in regard to the duration of its existence, whence it receives its name, but also because though a quadruped it has wings also.[62][b]

The Ancient Roman encyclopaedist Pliny the Elder described the mayfly as the "hemerobius" in his Natural History:

The River Bug on the Black Sea at midsummer brings down some thin membranes that look like berries out of which burst a four-legged caterpillar in the manner of the creature mentioned above, but it does not live beyond one day, owing to which it is called the hemerobius.[64]

In his 1789 book The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, Gilbert White described in the entry for "June 10th, 1771" how

Myriads of May-flies appear for the first time on the Alresford stream. The air was crowded with them, and the surface of the water covered. Large trouts sucked them in as they lay struggling on the surface of the stream, unable to rise till their wings were dried ... Their motions are very peculiar, up and down for so many yards almost in a perpendicular line.[65]

The mayfly has come to symbolise the transitoriness and brevity of life.[66] The English poet George Crabbe, known to have been interested in insects,[67] compared the brief life of a newspaper with that of mayflies, both being known as "Ephemera",[68] things that live for a day:[69]

In shoals the hours their constant numbers bring
Like insects waking to th' advancing spring;
Which take their rise from grubs obscene that lie
In shallow pools, or thence ascend the sky:
Such are these base ephemeras, so born
To die before the next revolving morn.

— George Crabbe, "The Newspaper", 1785

The theme of brief life is echoed in the artist Douglas Florian's 1998 poem, "The Mayfly".[70] The American Poet Laureate Richard Wilbur's 2005 poem "Mayflies" includes the lines "I saw from unseen pools a mist of flies, In their quadrillions rise, And animate a ragged patch of glow, With sudden glittering".[71]

Another literary reference to mayflies is seen in The Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the earliest surviving great works of literature. The briefness of Gilgamesh's life is compared to that of the adult mayfly.[72] In Szeged, Hungary, mayflies are celebrated in a monument near the Belvárosi bridge, the work of local sculptor Pal Farkas, depicting the courtship dance of mayflies.[73] The American playwright David Ives wrote a short comedic play, Time Flies, in 2001, as to what two mayflies might discuss during their one day of existence.[74]

In fly fishing

 
Fishing flies from Charles and Richard Bowlker's Art of Angling (1854) 2. "Blue Dun" mayfly. 3. "March Brown" mayfly

Mayflies are the primary source of models for artificial flies, hooks tied with coloured materials such as threads and feathers, used in fly fishing.[4] These are based on different life-cycle stages of mayflies. For example, the flies known as "emergers" in North America are designed by fly fishermen to resemble subimago mayflies, and are intended to lure freshwater trout.[75] In 1983, Patrick McCafferty recorded that artificial flies had been based on 36 genera of North American mayfly, from a total of 63 western species and 103 eastern/central species. A large number of these species have common names among fly fishermen, who need to develop a substantial knowledge of mayfly "habitat, distribution, seasonality, morphology and behavior" in order to match precisely the look and movements of the insects that the local trout are expecting.[4]

Izaak Walton describes the use of mayflies for catching trout in his 1653 book The Compleat Angler; for example, he names the "Green-drake" for use as a natural fly, and "duns" (mayfly subimagos) as artificial flies. These include for example the "Great Dun" and the "Great Blue Dun" in February; the "Whitish Dun" in March; the "Whirling Dun" and the "Yellow Dun" in April; the "Green-drake", the "Little Yellow May-Fly" and the "Grey-Drake" in May; and the "Black-Blue Dun" in July.[76] Nymph or "wet fly" fishing was restored to popularity on the chalk streams of England by G. E. M. Skues with his 1910 book Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream. In the book, Skues discusses the use of duns to catch trout.[77][78][79] The March brown is "probably the most famous of all British mayflies", having been copied by anglers to catch trout for over 500 years.[80][3]

Some English public houses beside trout streams such as the River Test in Hampshire are named "The Mayfly".[81][82][83]

As a spectacle

The hatch of the giant mayfly Palingenia longicauda on the Tisza and Maros Rivers in Hungary and Serbia, known as "Tisza blooming", is a tourist attraction.[84] The 2014 hatch of the large black-brown mayfly Hexagenia bilineata on the Mississippi River in the US was imaged on weather radar; the swarm flew up to 760 m (2,500 feet) above the ground near La Crosse, Wisconsin, creating a radar signature that resembled a "significant rain storm", and the mass of dead insects covering roads, cars and buildings caused a "slimy mess".[85]

During the weekend of 13–14 June 2015, a large swarm of mayflies caused several vehicular accidents on the Columbia–Wrightsville Bridge, carrying Pennsylvania Route 462 across the Susquehanna River between Columbia and Wrightsville, Pennsylvania. The bridge had to be closed to traffic twice during that period due to impaired visibility and obstructions posed by piles of dead insects.[86]

As food

Mayflies are consumed in several cultures and are estimated to contain the most raw protein content of any edible insect by dry weight. In Malawi, kungu, a paste of mayflies (Caenis kungu) and mosquitoes is made into a cake for eating. Adult mayflies are collected and eaten in many parts of China and Japan. Near Lake Victoria, Povilla mayflies are collected, dried and preserved for use in food preparations.[87]

As a name for ships and aircraft

 
HMA No. 1 Mayfly emerging from her floating shed at Vickers' yard at Barrow-in-Furness on 24 September 1911

"Mayfly" was the crew's nickname for His Majesty's Airship No. 1, an aerial scout airship built by Vickers but wrecked by strong winds in 1911 before her trial flights.[88]

Two vessels of the Royal Navy were named HMS Mayfly: a torpedo boat launched in January 1907,[89] and a Fly-class river gunboat constructed in sections at Yarrow in 1915.[90]

The Seddon Mayfly, which was constructed in 1908, was an aircraft that was unsuccessful in early flight. The first aircraft designed by a woman, Lillian Bland, was titled the Bland Mayfly.[72]

Other human uses

In pre-1950s France, "chute de manne" was obtained by pressing mayflies into cakes and using them as bird food and fishbait.[25] From an economic standpoint, mayflies also provide fisheries with an excellent diet for fish.[72] Mayflies could find uses in the biomedical, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic industries. Their exoskeleton contains chitin, which has applications in these industries.[72]

Research on genome expression in the mayfly Cloeon dipterum, has provided ideas on the evolution of the insect wing and giving support to the so-called gill theory which suggests that the ancestral insect wing may have evolved from larval gills of aquatic insects like mayflies.[91]

Mayfly larvae do not survive in polluted aquatic habitats and, thus, have been chosen as bioindicators, markers of water quality in ecological assessments.[92]

In marketing, Nike produced a line of running shoes in 2003 titled "Mayfly". The shoes were designed with a wing venation pattern like the mayfly and were also said to have a finite lifetime.[72] The telecommunication company Vodafone featured mayflies in a 2006 branding campaign, telling consumers to "make the most of now".[72]

Notes

  1. ^ Clutius is the latinised form of Outgert Cluyt (1578–1636).
  2. ^ Mayflies such as Hexagenia use 4 legs for walking; the male's front pair are specialised as claspers to hold the female during the mating flight. Aristotle also describes the mayfly in History of Animals, 552b.[63]

References

  1. ^ a b c Hoell, H. V.; Doyen, J. T.; Purcell, A. H. (1998). Introduction to Insect Biology and Diversity (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 320, 345–348. ISBN 978-0-19-510033-4.
  2. ^ Galbincea, Barb (18 June 2014). "Canadian soldiers invade Rocky River (photo gallery)". cleveland.com. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b McCully, C.B. (2000). "March Brown". The Language of Fly-Fishing. Taylor & Francis. pp. 125–126. ISBN 978-1-57958-275-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h McCafferty, W. Patrick (1983). "Mayflies". Aquatic Entomology: The Fishermen's and Ecologists' Illustrated Guide to Insects and Their Relatives. Jones & Bartlett. pp. 91–123. ISBN 978-0-86720-017-1.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Domínguez, Eduardo (2006). Ephemeroptera de América Del Sur. Pensoft Publishers. pp. 17–24. ISBN 978-954-642-259-0.
  6. ^ "Subimago". Britannica.com.
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External links

  •   Data related to Ephemeroptera at Wikispecies
  •   Media related to Ephemeroptera at Wikimedia Commons
  • Info about Ephemeroptera 2009-06-29 at the Wayback Machine on Tree of Life
  • Mayfly Central hosted by Purdue University

mayfly, other, uses, disambiguation, mayflies, also, known, shadflies, fishflies, canada, upper, midwestern, united, states, canadian, soldiers, american, great, lakes, region, winged, flies, united, kingdom, aquatic, insects, belonging, order, ephemeroptera, . For other uses see Mayfly disambiguation Mayflies also known as shadflies or fishflies in Canada and the upper Midwestern United States as Canadian soldiers in the American Great Lakes region 2 and as up winged flies in the United Kingdom are aquatic insects belonging to the order Ephemeroptera This order is part of an ancient group of insects termed the Palaeoptera which also contains dragonflies and damselflies Over 3 000 species of mayfly are known worldwide grouped into over 400 genera in 42 families MayflyTemporal range Late Carboniferous present 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NRhithrogena germanica the fly fisherman s March brown mayfly Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaSubclass PterygotaDivision PalaeopteraSuperorder EphemeropteroideaRohdendorf 1968Order EphemeropteraHyatt amp Arms 1891SubordersSee textMayflies have ancestral traits that were probably present in the first flying insects such as long tails and wings that do not fold flat over the abdomen Their immature stages are aquatic fresh water forms called naiads or nymphs whose presence indicates a clean unpolluted and highly oxygenated aquatic environment They are unique among insect orders in having a fully winged terrestrial preadult stage the subimago which moults into a sexually mature adult the imago Mayflies hatch emerge as adults from spring to autumn not necessarily in May in enormous numbers Some hatches attract tourists Fly fishermen make use of mayfly hatches by choosing artificial fishing flies that resemble them One of the most famous English mayflies is Rhithrogena germanica the fisherman s March brown mayfly 3 The brief lives of mayfly adults have been noted by naturalists and encyclopaedists since Aristotle and Pliny the Elder in classical antiquity The German engraver Albrecht Durer included a mayfly in his 1495 engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly to suggest a link between heaven and earth The English poet George Crabbe compared the brief life of a daily newspaper with that of a mayfly in the satirical poem The Newspaper 1785 both being known as ephemera Contents 1 Description 1 1 Nymph 1 2 Subimago 1 3 Imago 2 Biology 2 1 Reproduction and life cycle 2 2 Ecology 2 2 1 Effects on ecosystem functioning 2 3 Distribution 3 Conservation 4 Taxonomy and phylogeny 4 1 Phylogeny 5 In human culture 5 1 In art 5 2 In literature 5 3 In fly fishing 5 4 As a spectacle 5 5 As food 5 6 As a name for ships and aircraft 5 7 Other human uses 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksDescription EditNymph Edit Top left Mayfly nymph dorsal view showing the paired gills and three projections on the abdomen wing buds are visible on the thorax Top right Subimago of Leptophlebia marginata Bottom Nymph of the mayfly Cloeon dipterum showing seven pairs of gills along the sides of the abdomen Immature mayflies are aquatic and are referred to as nymphs or naiads In contrast to their short lives as adults they may live for several years in the water They have an elongated cylindrical or somewhat flattened body that passes through a number of instars stages molting and increasing in size each time When ready to emerge from the water nymphs vary in length depending on species from 3 to 30 mm 0 12 to 1 18 in 4 The head has a tough outer covering of sclerotin often with various hard ridges and projections it points either forwards or downwards with the mouth at the front There are two large compound eyes three ocelli simple eyes and a pair of antennae of variable lengths set between or in front of the eyes The mouthparts are designed for chewing and consist of a flap like labrum a pair of strong mandibles a pair of maxillae a membranous hypopharynx and a labium 5 The thorax consists of three segments the hindmost two the mesothorax and metathorax being fused Each segment bears a pair of legs which usually terminate in a single claw The legs are robust and often clad in bristles hairs or spines Wing pads develop on the mesothorax and in some species hindwing pads develop on the metathorax 5 The abdomen consists of ten segments some of which may be obscured by a large pair of operculate gills a thoracic shield expanded part of the prothorax or the developing wing pads In most taxa up to seven pairs of gills arise from the top or sides of the abdomen but in some species they are under the abdomen and in a very few species the gills are instead located on the coxae of the legs or the bases of the maxillae The abdomen terminates in slender thread like projections consisting of a pair of cerci with or without a third central caudal filament 5 Subimago Edit The final moult of the nymph is not to the full adult form but to a winged stage called a subimago that physically resembles the adult but which is usually sexually immature and duller in colour The subimago or dun 6 often has partially cloudy wings fringed with minute hairs known as microtrichia its eyes legs and genitalia are not fully developed Females of some mayflies subfamily Palingeniinae do not moult from a subimago state into an adult stage and are sexually mature while appearing like a subimago with microtrichia on the wing membrance Oligoneuriine mayflies form another exception in retaining microtrichia on their wings but not on their bodies Subimagos are generally poor fliers have shorter appendages and typically lack the colour patterns used to attract mates In males of Ephoron leukon the subimagos have forelegs that are short and compressed with accordion like folds and expands to more than double its length after moulting 7 After a period usually lasting one or two days but in some species only a few minutes the subimago moults to the full adult form making mayflies the only insects where a winged form undergoes a further moult 4 Imago Edit Adult Atalophlebia with the cylindrical dorsal or turban eyes visible Adult mayflies or imagos are relatively primitive in structure exhibiting traits that were probably present in the first flying insects These include long tails and wings that do not fold flat over the abdomen 8 Mayflies are delicate looking insects with one or two pairs of membranous triangular wings which are extensively covered with veins At rest the wings are held upright like those of a butterfly The hind wings are much smaller than the forewings and may be vestigial or absent The second segment of the thorax which bears the forewings is enlarged to hold the main flight muscles Adults have short flexible antennae large compound eyes three ocelli and non functional mouthparts In most species the males eyes are large and the front legs unusually long for use in locating and grasping females during the mid air mating In the males of some families there are two large cylindrical turban eyes also known as turbanate or turbinate eyes that face upwards in addition to the lateral eyes 9 They are capable of detecting ultraviolet light and are thought to be used during courtship to detect females flying above them 10 In some species all the legs are functionless apart from the front pair in males The abdomen is long and roughly cylindrical with ten segments and two or three long cerci tail like appendages at the tip Like Entognatha Archaeognatha and Zygentoma the spiracles on the abdomen don t have closing muscles 11 12 Uniquely among insects mayflies possess paired genitalia with the male having two aedeagi penis like organs and the female two gonopores sexual openings 1 4 Biology EditReproduction and life cycle Edit Mayflies are hemimetabolous they have incomplete metamorphosis They are unique among insects in that they moult one more time after acquiring functional wings 13 this last but one winged alate instar usually lives a very short time and is known as a subimago or to fly fishermen as a dun Mayflies at the subimago stage are a favourite food of many fish and many fishing flies are modelled to resemble them The subimago stage does not survive for long rarely for more than 24 hours In some species it may last for just a few minutes while the mayflies in the family Palingeniidae have sexually mature subimagos and no true adult form at all 1 Often all the individuals in a population mature at once a hatch and for a day or two in the spring or autumn mayflies are extremely abundant dancing around each other in large groups or resting on every available surface 4 In many species the emergence is synchronised with dawn or dusk and light intensity seems to be an important cue for emergence but other factors may also be involved Baetis intercalaris for example usually emerges just after sunset in July and August but in one year a large hatch was observed at midday in June The soft bodied subimagos are very attractive to predators Synchronous emergence is probably an adaptive strategy that reduces the individual s risk of being eaten 14 The lifespan of an adult mayfly is very short varying with the species The primary function of the adult is reproduction adults do not feed and have only vestigial mouthparts while their digestive systems are filled with air 13 Dolania americana has the shortest adult lifespan of any mayfly the adult females of the species live for less than five minutes 15 Mayflies known locally as shadflies swarm briefly in enormous numbers in Ontario Male adults may patrol individually but most congregate in swarms a few metres above water with clear open sky above it and perform a nuptial or courtship dance Each insect has a characteristic up and down pattern of movement strong wingbeats propel it upwards and forwards with the tail sloping down when it stops moving its wings it falls passively with the abdomen tilted upwards Females fly into these swarms and mating takes place in the air A rising male clasps the thorax of a female from below using his front legs bent upwards and inseminates her Copulation may last just a few seconds but occasionally a pair remains in tandem and flutters to the ground 16 Males may spend the night in vegetation and return to their dance the following day Although they do not feed some briefly touch the surface to drink a little water before flying off 16 Females typically lay between four hundred and three thousand eggs The eggs are often dropped onto the surface of the water sometimes the female deposits them by dipping the tip of her abdomen into the water during flight releasing a small batch of eggs each time or deposits them in bulk while standing next to the water In a few species the female submerges and places the eggs among plants or in crevices underwater but in general they sink to the bottom The incubation time is variable depending at least in part on temperature and may be anything from a few days to nearly a year Eggs can go into a quiet dormant phase or diapause 17 The larval growth rate is also temperature dependent as is the number of moults At anywhere between ten and fifty these post embryonic moults are more numerous in mayflies than in most other insect orders The nymphal stage of mayflies may last from several months to several years depending on species and environmental conditions 5 Around half of all mayfly species whose reproductive biology has been described are parthenogenetic able to asexually reproduce including both partially and exclusively parthenogenetic populations and species 18 Many species breed in moving water where there is a tendency for the eggs and nymphs to get washed downstream To counteract this females may fly upriver before depositing their eggs For example the female Tisza mayfly the largest European species with a length of 12 cm 4 7 in flies up to 3 kilometres 2 mi upstream before depositing eggs on the water surface These sink to the bottom and hatch after 45 days the nymphs burrowing their way into the sediment where they spend two or three years before hatching into subimagos 19 When ready to emerge several different strategies are used In some species the transformation of the nymph occurs underwater and the subimago swims to the surface and launches itself into the air 4 In other species the nymph rises to the surface bursts out of its skin remains quiescent for a minute or two resting on the exuviae cast skin and then flies upwards and in some the nymph climbs out of the water before transforming 20 Ecology Edit Rainbow trout are among the main predators of mayflies Nymphs live primarily in streams under rocks in decaying vegetation or in sediments Few species live in lakes but they are among the most prolific For example the emergence of one species of Hexagenia was recorded on Doppler weather radar by the shoreline of Lake Erie in 2003 21 In the nymphs of most mayfly species the paddle like gills do not function as respiratory surfaces because sufficient oxygen is absorbed through the integument instead serving to create a respiratory current However in low oxygen environments such as the mud at the bottom of ponds in which Ephemera vulgata burrows the filamentous gills act as true accessory respiratory organs and are used in gaseous exchange 22 In most species the nymphs are herbivores or detritivores feeding on algae diatoms or detritus but in a few species they are predators of chironomid and other small insect larvae and nymphs 23 24 Nymphs of Povilla burrow into submerged wood and can be a problem for boat owners in Asia 25 Some are able to shift from one feeding group to another as they grow thus enabling them to utilise a variety of food resources They process a great quantity of organic matter as nymphs and transfer a lot of phosphates and nitrates to terrestrial environments when they emerge from the water thus helping to remove pollutants from aqueous systems 5 Along with caddisfly larvae and gastropod molluscs the grazing of mayfly nymphs has a significant impact on the primary producers the plants and algae on the bed of streams and rivers 26 The nymphs are eaten by a wide range of predators and form an important part of the aquatic food chain Fish are among the main predators picking nymphs off the bottom or ingesting them in the water column and feeding on emerging nymphs and adults on the water surface Carnivorous stonefly caddisfly alderfly and dragonfly larvae feed on bottom dwelling mayfly nymphs as do aquatic beetles leeches crayfish and amphibians 27 Besides the direct mortality caused by these predators the behaviour of their potential prey is also affected with the nymphs growth rate being slowed by the need to hide rather than feed 26 The nymphs are highly susceptible to pollution and can be useful in the biomonitoring of water bodies 4 Once they have emerged large numbers are preyed on by birds bats and by other insects such as Rhamphomyia longicauda 5 Mayfly nymphs may serve as hosts for parasites such as nematodes and trematodes Some of these affect the nymphs behaviour in such a way that they become more likely to be predated 28 29 Other nematodes turn adult male mayflies into quasi females which haunt the edges of streams enabling the parasites to break their way out into the aqueous environment they need to complete their life cycles 30 The nymphs can also serve as intermediate hosts for the horsehair worm Paragordius varius which causes its definitive host a grasshopper to jump into water and drown 31 Effects on ecosystem functioning Edit Mayflies are involved in both primary production and bioturbation A study in laboratory simulated streams revealed that the mayfly genus Centroptilum increased the export of periphyton 32 thus indirectly affecting primary production positively which is an essential process for ecosystems The mayfly can also reallocate and alter the nutrient availability in aquatic habitats through the process of bioturbation By burrowing in the bottom of lakes and redistributing nutrients mayflies indirectly regulate phytoplankton and epibenthic primary production 33 Once burrowing to the bottom of the lake mayfly nymphs begin to billow their respiratory gills This motion creates current that carries food particles through the burrow and allows the nymph to filter feed Other mayfly nymphs possess elaborate filter feeding mechanisms like that of the genus Isonychia The nymph have forelegs that contain long bristle like structures that have two rows of hairs Interlocking hairs form the filter by which the insect traps food particles The action of filter feeding has a small impact on water purification but an even larger impact on the convergence of small particulate matter into matter of a more complex form that goes on to benefit consumers later in the food chain 34 Distribution Edit Mayflies are distributed all over the world in clean freshwater habitats 35 though absent from Antarctica 36 They tend to be absent from oceanic islands or represented by one or two species that have dispersed from nearby mainland Female mayflies may be dispersed by wind and eggs may be transferred by adhesion to the legs of waterbirds 37 The greatest generic diversity is found in the Neotropical realm while the Holarctic has a smaller number of genera but a high degree of speciation Some thirteen families are restricted to a single bioregion 38 The main families have some general habitat preferences the Baetidae favour warm water the Heptageniidae live under stones and prefer fast flowing water and the relatively large Ephemeridae make burrows in sandy lake or river beds 35 Conservation EditThe nymph is the dominant life history stage of the mayfly Different insect species vary in their tolerance to water pollution but in general the larval stages of mayflies stoneflies Plecoptera and caddis flies Trichoptera are susceptible to a number of pollutants including sewage pesticides and industrial effluent In general mayflies are particularly sensitive to acidification but tolerances vary and certain species are exceptionally tolerant to heavy metal contamination and to low pH levels Ephemerellidae are among the most tolerant groups and Siphlonuridae and Caenidae the least The adverse effects on the insects of pollution may be either lethal or sub lethal in the latter case resulting in altered enzyme function poor growth changed behaviour or lack of reproductive success As important parts of the food chain pollution can cause knock on effects to other organisms a dearth of herbivorous nymphs can cause overgrowth of algae and a scarcity of predacious nymphs can result in an over abundance of their prey species 39 Fish that feed on mayfly nymphs that have bioaccumulated heavy metals are themselves at risk 40 Adult female mayflies find water by detecting the polarization of reflected light They are easily fooled by other polished surfaces which can act as traps for swarming mayflies 10 The threat to mayflies applies also to their eggs Modest levels of pollution in rivers in England are sufficient to kill 80 of mayfly eggs which are as vulnerable to pollutants as other life cycle stages numbers of the blue winged olive mayfly Baetis have fallen dramatically almost to none in some rivers The major pollutants thought to be responsible are fine sediment and phosphate from agriculture and sewage 41 The status of many species of mayflies is unknown because they are known from only the original collection data Four North American species are believed to be extinct Among these Pentagenia robusta was originally collected from the Ohio River near Cincinnati but this species has not been seen since its original collection in the 1800s Ephemera compar is known from a single specimen collected from the foothills of Colorado in 1873 but despite intensive surveys of the Colorado mayflies reported in 1984 it has not been rediscovered 42 The International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN red list of threatened species includes one mayfly Tasmanophlebi lacuscoerulei the large blue lake mayfly which is a native of Australia and is listed as endangered because its alpine habitat is vulnerable to climate change 43 Taxonomy and phylogeny Edit Fossil adult Mickoleitia longimanus Coxoplectoptera Mickoleitiidae from the Lower Cretaceous Crato Formation of Brazil c 108 mya Mayfly nymphs belonging to the genus Prosopistoma the only living genus in the Prosopistomatidae As of 2012 over 3 000 species of mayfly in 42 families and over 400 genera are known worldwide 44 45 including about 630 species in North America 46 Mayflies are an ancient group of winged pterygote insects Putative fossil stem group representatives e g Syntonopteroidea like Lithoneura lameerrei are already known from the late Carboniferous 47 The name Ephemeroptera is from the Greek ἐfhmeros ephemeros short lived literally lasting a day cf English ephemeral and pteron pteron wing referring to the brief lifespan of adults The English common name is for the insect s emergence in or around the month of May in the UK 48 The name shadfly is from the Atlantic fish the shad which runs up American East Coast rivers at the same time as many mayflies emerge 49 50 From the Permian numerous stem group representatives of mayflies are known which are often lumped into a separate taxon Permoplectoptera e g including Protereisma permianum in the Protereismatidae 47 and Misthodotidae The larvae of Permoplectoptera still had 9 pairs of abdominal gills and the adults still had long hindwings Maybe the fossil family Cretereismatidae from the Lower Cretaceous Crato Formation of Brazil also belongs as the last offshoot to Permoplectoptera The Crato outcrops otherwise yielded fossil specimens of modern mayfly families or the extinct but modern family Hexagenitidae However from the same locality the strange larvae and adults of the extinct family Mickoleitiidae order Coxoplectoptera have been described 51 which represents the fossil sister group of modern mayflies even though they had very peculiar adaptations such as raptorial forelegs The oldest mayfly inclusion in amber is Cretoneta zherichini Leptophlebiidae from the Lower Cretaceous of Siberia In the much younger Baltic amber numerous inclusions of several modern families of mayflies have been found Ephemeridae Potamanthidae Leptophlebiidae Ametropodidae Siphlonuridae Isonychiidae Heptageniidae and Ephemerellidae 52 The modern genus Neoephemera is represented in the fossil record by the Ypresian 53 species N antiqua from Washington state 54 Grimaldi and Engel reviewing the phylogeny in 2005 commented that many cladistic studies had been made with no stability in Ephemeroptera suborders and infraorders the traditional division into Schistonota and Pannota was wrong because Pannota is derived from the Schistonota 47 The phylogeny of the Ephemeroptera was first studied using molecular analysis by Ogden and Whiting in 2005 They recovered the Baetidae as sister to the other clades 55 Mayfly phylogeny was further studied using morphological and molecular analyses by Ogden and others in 2009 They found that the Asian genus Siphluriscus was sister to all other mayflies Some existing lineages such as Ephemeroidea and families such as Ameletopsidae were found not to be monophyletic through convergence among nymphal features 56 The following traditional classification is based on Peters and Campbell 1991 in Insects of Australia 57 Suborder Pannota Superfamily Ephemerelloidea Ephemerellidae Leptohyphidae Tricorythidae Superfamily Caenoidea Neoephemeridae Baetiscidae Caenidae Prosopistomatidae Suborder Schistonota Superfamily Baetoidea Siphlonuridae Baetidae Oniscigastridae Ameletopsidae Ametropodidae Superfamily Heptagenioidea Coloburiscidae Oligoneuriidae Isonychiidae Heptageniidae Superfamily Leptophlebioidea Leptophlebiidae Superfamily Ephemeroidea Behningiidae Potamanthidae Euthyplociidae Polymitarcyidae Ephemeridae Palingeniidae Phylogeny Edit After 18 SiphluriscidaeBaetidaeCarapacea BaetiscidaeProsopistomatidaeColoburiscidaeLeptophlebiidaeChromarcyidaeOligoneuriidaeEphemerelloidea VietnamellidaeAustremerellidaeTeloganodidaeTeloganellidaeMelanemerellidaeEphemerythidaeMachadorythidaeTricorythidaeDicercomyzidaeCoryphoridaeLeptohyphidaeEphemerellidaeCaenoidea NeoephemeridaeCaenidaePotamanthidaePolymitarcyidaeBehningiidaeEuthyplociidaeIchthybotidaePalingeniidaeEphemeridaeAcanthametropodidaeAmetropodidaeMetropodidaeIsonychiidaeHeptageniidaeRallidentidaeSiphlaenigmatidaeDipteromimidaeOniscigastridaeAmeletopsidaeNesameletidaeAmeletidaeSiphlonuridaeIn human culture EditIn art Edit The Dutch Golden Age author Augerius Clutius Outgert Cluyt illustrated some mayflies in his 1634 De Hemerobio On the Mayfly the earliest book written on the group Maerten de Vos similarly illustrated a mayfly in his 1587 depiction of the fifth day of creation amongst an assortment of fish and water birds 58 59 In 1495 Albrecht Durer included a mayfly in his engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly 60 The critics Larry Silver and Pamela H Smith argue that the image provides an explicit link between heaven and earth to suggest a cosmic resonance between sacred and profane celestial and terrestrial macrocosm and microcosm 61 Mayfly in art Mayflies drawn by Augerius Clutius a in De Hemerobio 1634 Mayfly by Jan Sadeler after Maerten de Vos detail from The Fifth Day The Creation of the Birds and Fishes c 1587 Albrecht Durer s engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly 1495 Detail of mayfly in lower right corner of Albrecht Durer s engraving The Holy Family with the Mayfly 1495 May Flies in Sunset Dance by Philip Henry Gosse in a Victorian edition of Gilbert White s Natural History of SelborneIn literature Edit The Ancient Greek biologist and philosopher Aristotle wrote in his History of Animals that Bloodless and many footed animals whether furnished with wings or feet move with more than four points of motion as for instance the dayfly ephemeron moves with four feet and four wings and I may observe in passing this creature is exceptional not only in regard to the duration of its existence whence it receives its name but also because though a quadruped it has wings also 62 b The Ancient Roman encyclopaedist Pliny the Elder described the mayfly as the hemerobius in his Natural History The River Bug on the Black Sea at midsummer brings down some thin membranes that look like berries out of which burst a four legged caterpillar in the manner of the creature mentioned above but it does not live beyond one day owing to which it is called the hemerobius 64 In his 1789 book The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne Gilbert White described in the entry for June 10th 1771 how Myriads of May flies appear for the first time on the Alresford stream The air was crowded with them and the surface of the water covered Large trouts sucked them in as they lay struggling on the surface of the stream unable to rise till their wings were dried Their motions are very peculiar up and down for so many yards almost in a perpendicular line 65 The mayfly has come to symbolise the transitoriness and brevity of life 66 The English poet George Crabbe known to have been interested in insects 67 compared the brief life of a newspaper with that of mayflies both being known as Ephemera 68 things that live for a day 69 In shoals the hours their constant numbers bring Like insects waking to th advancing spring Which take their rise from grubs obscene that lie In shallow pools or thence ascend the sky Such are these base ephemeras so born To die before the next revolving morn George Crabbe The Newspaper 1785 The theme of brief life is echoed in the artist Douglas Florian s 1998 poem The Mayfly 70 The American Poet Laureate Richard Wilbur s 2005 poem Mayflies includes the lines I saw from unseen pools a mist of flies In their quadrillions rise And animate a ragged patch of glow With sudden glittering 71 Another literary reference to mayflies is seen in The Epic of Gilgamesh one of the earliest surviving great works of literature The briefness of Gilgamesh s life is compared to that of the adult mayfly 72 In Szeged Hungary mayflies are celebrated in a monument near the Belvarosi bridge the work of local sculptor Pal Farkas depicting the courtship dance of mayflies 73 The American playwright David Ives wrote a short comedic play Time Flies in 2001 as to what two mayflies might discuss during their one day of existence 74 In fly fishing Edit Fishing flies from Charles and Richard Bowlker s Art of Angling 1854 2 Blue Dun mayfly 3 March Brown mayfly Mayflies are the primary source of models for artificial flies hooks tied with coloured materials such as threads and feathers used in fly fishing 4 These are based on different life cycle stages of mayflies For example the flies known as emergers in North America are designed by fly fishermen to resemble subimago mayflies and are intended to lure freshwater trout 75 In 1983 Patrick McCafferty recorded that artificial flies had been based on 36 genera of North American mayfly from a total of 63 western species and 103 eastern central species A large number of these species have common names among fly fishermen who need to develop a substantial knowledge of mayfly habitat distribution seasonality morphology and behavior in order to match precisely the look and movements of the insects that the local trout are expecting 4 Izaak Walton describes the use of mayflies for catching trout in his 1653 book The Compleat Angler for example he names the Green drake for use as a natural fly and duns mayfly subimagos as artificial flies These include for example the Great Dun and the Great Blue Dun in February the Whitish Dun in March the Whirling Dun and the Yellow Dun in April the Green drake the Little Yellow May Fly and the Grey Drake in May and the Black Blue Dun in July 76 Nymph or wet fly fishing was restored to popularity on the chalk streams of England by G E M Skues with his 1910 book Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream In the book Skues discusses the use of duns to catch trout 77 78 79 The March brown is probably the most famous of all British mayflies having been copied by anglers to catch trout for over 500 years 80 3 Some English public houses beside trout streams such as the River Test in Hampshire are named The Mayfly 81 82 83 As a spectacle Edit The hatch of the giant mayfly Palingenia longicauda on the Tisza and Maros Rivers in Hungary and Serbia known as Tisza blooming is a tourist attraction 84 The 2014 hatch of the large black brown mayfly Hexagenia bilineata on the Mississippi River in the US was imaged on weather radar the swarm flew up to 760 m 2 500 feet above the ground near La Crosse Wisconsin creating a radar signature that resembled a significant rain storm and the mass of dead insects covering roads cars and buildings caused a slimy mess 85 During the weekend of 13 14 June 2015 a large swarm of mayflies caused several vehicular accidents on the Columbia Wrightsville Bridge carrying Pennsylvania Route 462 across the Susquehanna River between Columbia and Wrightsville Pennsylvania The bridge had to be closed to traffic twice during that period due to impaired visibility and obstructions posed by piles of dead insects 86 As food Edit Mayflies are consumed in several cultures and are estimated to contain the most raw protein content of any edible insect by dry weight In Malawi kungu a paste of mayflies Caenis kungu and mosquitoes is made into a cake for eating Adult mayflies are collected and eaten in many parts of China and Japan Near Lake Victoria Povilla mayflies are collected dried and preserved for use in food preparations 87 As a name for ships and aircraft Edit HMA No 1 Mayfly emerging from her floating shed at Vickers yard at Barrow in Furness on 24 September 1911 Mayfly was the crew s nickname for His Majesty s Airship No 1 an aerial scout airship built by Vickers but wrecked by strong winds in 1911 before her trial flights 88 Two vessels of the Royal Navy were named HMS Mayfly a torpedo boat launched in January 1907 89 and a Fly class river gunboat constructed in sections at Yarrow in 1915 90 The Seddon Mayfly which was constructed in 1908 was an aircraft that was unsuccessful in early flight The first aircraft designed by a woman Lillian Bland was titled the Bland Mayfly 72 Other human uses Edit In pre 1950s France chute de manne was obtained by pressing mayflies into cakes and using them as bird food and fishbait 25 From an economic standpoint mayflies also provide fisheries with an excellent diet for fish 72 Mayflies could find uses in the biomedical pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries Their exoskeleton contains chitin which has applications in these industries 72 Research on genome expression in the mayfly Cloeon dipterum has provided ideas on the evolution of the insect wing and giving support to the so called gill theory which suggests that the ancestral insect wing may have evolved from larval gills of aquatic insects like mayflies 91 Mayfly larvae do not survive in polluted aquatic habitats and thus have been chosen as bioindicators markers of water quality in ecological assessments 92 In marketing Nike produced a line of running shoes in 2003 titled Mayfly The shoes were designed with a wing venation pattern like the mayfly and were also said to have a finite lifetime 72 The telecommunication company Vodafone featured mayflies in a 2006 branding campaign telling consumers to make the most of now 72 Notes Edit Clutius is the latinised form of Outgert Cluyt 1578 1636 Mayflies such as Hexagenia use 4 legs for walking the male s front pair are specialised as claspers to hold the female during the mating flight Aristotle also describes the mayfly in History of Animals 552b 63 References Edit a b c Hoell H V Doyen J T Purcell A H 1998 Introduction to Insect Biology and Diversity 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 320 345 348 ISBN 978 0 19 510033 4 Galbincea Barb 18 June 2014 Canadian soldiers invade Rocky River photo gallery cleveland com Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b McCully C B 2000 March Brown The Language of Fly Fishing Taylor amp Francis pp 125 126 ISBN 978 1 57958 275 3 a b c d e f g h McCafferty W Patrick 1983 Mayflies Aquatic Entomology The Fishermen s and Ecologists Illustrated Guide to Insects and Their Relatives Jones amp Bartlett pp 91 123 ISBN 978 0 86720 017 1 a b c d e f Dominguez Eduardo 2006 Ephemeroptera de America Del Sur Pensoft Publishers pp 17 24 ISBN 978 954 642 259 0 Subimago Britannica com Edmunds G F McCafferty W P 1988 The Mayfly Subimago Annual Review of Entomology 33 1 509 527 doi 10 1146 annurev en 33 010188 002453 ISSN 0066 4170 Thomas Jessica A Trueman John W H Rambaut Andrew Welch John J 2013 Relaxed phylogenetics and the Palaeoptera problem resolving deep ancestral splits in the insect phylogeny Systematic Biology 62 2 285 297 doi 10 1093 sysbio sys093 PMID 23220768 Burghause Frank 1981 The structure of the double eyes of Baetis and the uniform eyes of Ecdyonurus Ephemeroptera Zoomorphology 98 17 34 doi 10 1007 BF00310318 S2CID 36002849 a b Horvath Gabor Varju Dezso 2004 Polarized Light in Animal Vision Polarization Patterns in Nature Springer pp 238 239 Insect Morphology and Phylogeny page 101 Proceedings of the 1st Dresden Meeting on Insect Phylogeny Phylogenetic Relationships within the Insect Orders Dresden September 19 21 2003 page 7 a b Lancaster Jill Downes Barbara J 2013 Aquatic Entomology Oxford University Press pp 9 10 ISBN 978 0 19 957322 6 Flannagan John F Marshall K Eric 2012 Advances in Ephemeroptera Biology Springer Science amp Business Media p 293 ISBN 978 1 4613 3066 0 Welch Craig H 1998 Chapter 37 Shortest Reproductive Life Book of Insect Records University of Florida Archived from the original on 2015 07 30 a b Spieth Herman T 1940 Studies on the biology of the Ephemeroptera II The nuptial flight Journal of the New York Entomological Society 48 4 379 390 JSTOR 25004879 Clifford Hugh F 1982 Life cycles of mayflies Ephemeroptera with special reference to voltinism PDF Quaestiones Entomologicae 18 15 90 a b Liegeois Maud Sartori Michel Schwander Tanja 2021 03 12 Orive Maria ed Extremely Widespread Parthenogenesis and a Trade Off Between Alternative Forms of Reproduction in Mayflies Ephemeroptera Journal of Heredity 112 1 45 57 doi 10 1093 jhered esaa027 ISSN 0022 1503 PMC 7953839 PMID 32918457 Robinson William H 2005 Urban Insects and Arachnids A Handbook of Urban Entomology Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 978 1 139 44347 0 Berner Lewis Pescador Manuel L 1988 The Mayflies of Florida University Press of Florida p 108 ISBN 978 0 8130 0845 5 Return of the mayfly an indicator of an improving habitat PDF Pennsylvania Sea Grant 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Wingfield C A 1939 The function of the gills of mayfly nymphs from different habitats PDF Journal of Experimental Biology 16 3 363 373 doi 10 1242 jeb 16 3 363 ISSN 1477 9145 Gattolliat Jean Luc Sartori Michel 2000 Guloptiloides an Extraordinary New Carnivorous Genus of Baetidae Ephemeroptera Aquatic Insects 22 2 148 159 doi 10 1076 0165 0424 200004 22 2 1 p ft148 S2CID 86012067 McCafferty W P Provonsha A V 1986 Comparative mouthpart morphology and evolution of the carnivorous heptageniidae Ephemeroptera Aquatic Insects 8 2 83 89 doi 10 1080 01650428609361236 a b Sartori Michel Brittain John E 2014 Order Ephemeroptera In Thorp Rogers eds Thorp and Covich s Freshwater Invertebrates 4th ed Academic Press pp 873 891 a b Hauer F Richard Lamberti Gary A 2011 Methods in Stream Ecology Academic Press pp 538 561 ISBN 978 0 08 054743 5 Thorp James H Rogers D Christopher 6 September 2014 Thorp and Covich s Freshwater Invertebrates Ecology and General Biology Elsevier p 886 ISBN 978 0 12 385027 0 Vance Sarah A Peckarsky Barbara L 1997 The effect of mermithid parasitism on predation of nymphal Baetis bicaudatus Ephemeroptera by invertebrates Oecologia 110 1 147 152 Bibcode 1997Oecol 110 147V doi 10 1007 s004420050143 PMID 28307463 S2CID 1164123 Williams J K Townsend C R Poulin R 2001 Mermithid nematode infections and drift in the mayfly Deleatidium spp Ephemeroptera Journal of Parasitology 87 5 1225 1227 doi 10 1645 0022 3395 2001 087 1225 MNIADI 2 0 CO 2 PMID 11695410 S2CID 24933760 Zimmer Carl 2003 Parasite Rex Inside the Bizarre World of Nature s Most Dangerous Creatures Arrow pp 84 86 ISBN 978 0 09 945799 2 Goater Timothy M Goater Cameron P Esch Gerald W 2013 Parasitism The Diversity and Ecology of Animal Parasites Cambridge University Press p 248 ISBN 978 1 107 64961 3 Lamberti Gary A Ashkenas Linda R Gregory Stan V Steinman Alan D 1987 06 01 Effects of Three Herbivores on Periphyton Communities in Laboratory Streams Journal of the North American Benthological Society 6 2 92 104 doi 10 2307 1467219 ISSN 0887 3593 JSTOR 1467219 S2CID 54578281 Bachteram Andre M Mazurek Kerry A Ciborowski Jan J H 2005 01 01 Sediment Suspension by Burrowing Mayflies Hexagenia spp Ephemeroptera Ephemeridae Journal of Great Lakes Research Lake Erie Trophic Status Collaborative Study 31 Supplement 2 208 222 doi 10 1016 S0380 1330 05 70315 4 Merritt Richard W Wallace J Bruce April 1981 Filter feeding Insects PDF Scientific American 244 4 132 136 141 142 144 Bibcode 1981SciAm 244d 132M doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0481 132 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2017 01 08 a b Ephemeroptera General Entomology University of North Carolina Archived from the original on 9 January 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2015 Riffenburgh Beau 2007 Encyclopedia of the Antarctic Taylor amp Francis p 531 ISBN 978 0 415 97024 2 Edmunds Jr George F 1972 Biogeography and Evolution of Ephemeroptera Annual Review of Entomology 17 21 42 doi 10 1146 annurev en 17 010172 000321 Barber James Helen M Gattolliat Jean Luc Sartori Michel Hubbard Michael D 2008 Global diversity of mayflies Ephemeroptera Insecta in freshwater Developments in Hydrobiology Vol 198 pp 339 350 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 8259 7 37 ISBN 978 1 4020 8258 0 John L Capinera 2008 Encyclopedia of Entomology Springer Science amp Business Media pp 4158 4165 ISBN 978 1 4020 6242 1 Di Giulio Richard T Hinton David E 2008 The Toxicology of Fishes CRC Press p 794 ISBN 978 0 203 64729 5 Carrington Damian 11 January 2018 Insect declines new alarm over mayfly is tip of iceberg warn experts The Guardian Retrieved 11 January 2018 Edmunds G F Jr McCafferty W P 1984 Ephemera compar an obscure Colorado burrowing mayfly Ephemeroptera Ephemeridae PDF Entomological News 95 186 188 Suter P 2014 Tasmanophlebi lacuscoerulei IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T40728A21425993 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 1 RLTS T40728A21425993 en Bauernfeind Ernst Soldan Tomas 2012 The Mayflies of Europe Ephemeroptera BRILL p 35 ISBN 978 90 04 26088 7 Barber James Helen M Gattolliat Jean Luc Sartori Michel Hubbard Michael D 2008 Global diversity of mayflies Ephemeroptera Insecta in freshwater Hydrobiologia 595 339 350 doi 10 1007 s10750 007 9028 y S2CID 29423209 CSIRO page for Ephemeroptera Retrieved 2 August 2015 a b c Grimaldi David Engel Michael S 2005 Evolution of the Insects Cambridge University Press pp 162 165 ISBN 978 0 521 82149 0 Mayfly Cited to Chambers s Twentieth Century Dictionary Retrieved 10 July 2015 Shad n Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 10 July 2015 Mertz Leslie 1 June 2015 How to Survive a Massive Mayfly Swarm Entomology Today Retrieved 7 March 2018 Regional colloquialisms include fishflies shadflies and a slew of other names that aren t fit to print Staniczek A H Bechly G Godunko R J 2011 Coxoplectoptera a new fossil order of Palaeoptera Arthropoda Insecta with comments on the phylogeny of the stem group of mayflies Ephemeroptera Insect Systematics amp Evolution 42 2 101 138 doi 10 1163 187631211X578406 Poinar G O Jr 1992 Life in Amber Stanford University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 8047 2001 4 Makarkin V N Archibald S B 2009 A new genus and first Cenozoic fossil record of moth lacewings Neuroptera Ithonidae from the Early Eocene of North America PDF Zootaxa 2063 55 63 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 2063 1 3 S2CID 13922025 Sinitshenkova N D 1999 A new mayfly species of the extant genus Neoephemera from the Eocene of North America Insecta Ephemerida Ephemeroptera Neoephemeridae PDF Paleontological Journal 33 4 403 405 Ogden T H Whiting M F 2005 Phylogeny of Ephemeroptera mayflies based on molecular evidence Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 37 3 625 643 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 08 008 PMID 16214375 Ogden T H Gattolliat J L Sartori M Staniczek A H Soldan T Whiting M F 2009 Towards a new paradigm in mayfly phylogeny Ephemeroptera combined analysis of morphological and molecular data Systematic Entomology 34 4 616 634 doi 10 1111 j 1365 3113 2009 00488 x S2CID 40414249 Ephemoptera Mayflies The Tree of Life Web Project 2002 Archived from the original on 29 June 2009 Retrieved 1 June 2015 Jorink Eric 2010 Reading the Book of Nature in the Dutch Golden Age 1575 1715 Brill p 200 ISBN 978 90 04 18671 2 Enenkel K A E 2014 Zoology in Early Modern Culture Intersections of Science Theology Philology and Political and Religious Education BRILL p 366 ISBN 978 90 04 27917 9 The Holy Family with the Mayfly 1495 1496 National Gallery of Art Retrieved 14 March 2015 Smith Pamela Findlen Paula 2013 Merchants and Marvels Commerce Science and Art in Early Modern Europe Taylor amp Francis p 31 ISBN 978 1 135 30035 7 Aristotle History of Animals p 490 a b Scarborough John 1992 Medical and Biological Terminologies Classical Origins University of Oklahoma Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 8061 3029 3 Pliny the Elder 1947 79 Natural History Vol III Translated by Rackham H William Heinemann p 507 NH Book XI XLIII White Gilbert 1837 The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne Printed for J and A Arch p 469 Kreiger Georgia 2 August 2012 Mayfly Hippocampus Magazine Retrieved 14 March 2015 Pollard Arthur 2003 George Crabbe The Critical Heritage Routledge pp 409 410 ISBN 978 1 134 78243 7 Ephemera The Free Dictionary Retrieved 14 March 2015 Crabbe George March 2004 The Village and the Newspaper by George Crabbe Gutenberg org Retrieved 14 March 2015 Florian Douglas The Mayfly The Poetry Foundation Retrieved 2 June 2015 Wilbur Richard Mayflies Poetry Archive Retrieved 2 June 2015 a b c d e f Macadam Craig R Stockan Jenni A 2015 More than just fish food ecosystem services provided by freshwater insects Ecological Entomology 40 113 123 doi 10 1111 een 12245 ISSN 1365 2311 S2CID 84112363 Wennemann L Sipos P Wright L C 2004 04 01 The Mayfly Monument and the Moth of Freedom American Entomologist 50 2 87 89 doi 10 1093 ae 50 2 87 ISSN 1046 2821 Ives David 2001 Time Flies and Other Short Plays Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 3758 6 Hughes Dave 1999 Mayfly Emergers Trout Flies The tier s reference Stackpole Books pp 170 186 ISBN 978 0 8117 1601 7 Walton Izaak 1875 The Complete Angler or The Contemplative Man s Recreation Chatto and Windus pp 241 253 262 Walker C F 1956 The Angling Letters of G E M Skues Adams and Charles Black Hills John Waller 1921 A History of Fly Fishing for Trout Phillip Allan amp Co pp 132 133 Skues G E M 1914 Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream and Kindred Studies 2nd ed London A amp C Black p 8ff It has been advanced as an argument against the use of the wet fly that duns and the other small insects which drift down upon the surface of a stream are never seen by the fish under water and that a wet fly is therefore an unnatural object especially if winged Never is a big word and I venture to think the case is overstated I have watched an eddy with little swirling whirlpools in it for an hour together and again and again I have seen little groups of flies caught in one or other of the whirls sucked under and thrown scatterwise through the water March brown mayfly Buglife org Retrieved 4 August 2015 Miller Wendy 14 August 2009 Hampshire Pub Guide The Mayfly in Fullerton The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Retrieved 30 May 2015 The Mayfly Chilbolton Beer in the Evening Retrieved 30 May 2015 Mayfly Chilbolton Wherwell Hampshire The Good Pub Guide Retrieved 30 May 2015 Europe s largest mayfly Riverfly Teifi Rivers Invertebrate Monitors 5 April 2011 Grenoble Ryan 23 July 2014 This year s mayfly hatch was so big it showed up on radar and caused a car wreck Huffington Post Retrieved 30 May 2015 Why mayflies swarmed Columbia Wrightsville bridge 2015 06 15 Grant Peter M 2001 Mayflies as food PDF In Dominguez E ed Trends in Research in Ephemeroptera and Plecoptera Kluwer pp 107 124 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 1257 8 14 ISBN 978 1 4613 5465 9 Hearst Magazines December 1911 Popular Mechanics Popular Mechanics Hearst Magazines 773 ISSN 0032 4558 Randall Ian 1997 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Conway Maritime Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 851 77245 5 Colledge J J Warlow Ben 2006 1969 Ships of the Royal Navy The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy Rev ed London Chatham Publishing p 106 ISBN 978 1 86176 281 8 Almudi Isabel Vizueta Joel Wyatt Christopher D R de Mendoza Alex Marletaz Ferdinand Firbas Panos N et al 2020 Genomic adaptations to aquatic and aerial life in mayflies and the origin of insect wings Nature Communications 11 1 2631 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 2631A doi 10 1038 s41467 020 16284 8 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 7250882 PMID 32457347 Arimoro Francis Ofurum Muller Wilhelmine J 2009 Mayfly Insecta Ephemeroptera community structure as an indicator of the ecological status of a stream in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 166 1 4 581 594 doi 10 1007 s10661 009 1025 3 ISSN 0167 6369 PMID 19543701 S2CID 11317354 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article May fly Data related to Ephemeroptera at Wikispecies Media related to Ephemeroptera at Wikimedia Commons Info about Ephemeroptera Archived 2009 06 29 at the Wayback Machine on Tree of Life Mayfly Central hosted by Purdue University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 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