TL;DR: Females of the three Trichoptera species studied are able to make a clear choice of oviposition site in the heterogeneous stream environment, which is seen as the main selective pressure leading to the observed egg-laying behaviour.
Abstract: SUMMARY
1. Oviposition site selection was studied in three trichopteran species; an undescribed species of Hydatophylax (Limnephilidae), Onocosmoecus unicolor (Limnephilidae) and Neophylax rickeri (Uenoidae), in two Coastal Range streams in California, U.S.A.
2. Hydatophylax sp. egg masses were generally found at or above the water surface on substrata near the bank in pools, where undercut banks, overhanging vegetation and rocks shaded attachment sites and provided wind protection. Onocosmoecus unicolor females deposited their egg masses exclusively above the water on moist emergent wood. The egg masses of N. rickeri were almost exclusively found in high velocity areas of riffles, where females oviposited under water and attached their egg masses to the submersed undersides of unembedded, protruding stones with large emergent surfaces.
3. For Hydatophylax sp. and N. rickeri, a hierarchical selection scheme is proposed in which females use cues at three different spatial levels (stream, stream subunit, substratum) to choose oviposition sites. Females of O. unicolor seemed to choose at only two different levels of spatial resolution (stream, substratum).
4. The formation of large aggregations of egg masses in N. rickeri and O. unicolor suggests that females actively choose oviposition sites where conspecific egg masses are already attached. The clustering of egg masses may minimise the risk of predation through the dilution effect, because egg masses of N. rickeri and O. unicolor are both attacked by dipteran predators.
5. Females of the three Trichoptera species studied are able to make a clear choice of oviposition site in the heterogeneous stream environment. In comparison with other stream microhabitats, these are characterised by stable and relatively predictable environmental conditions during the time of egg development, which is seen as the main selective pressure leading to the observed egg-laying behaviour.
TL;DR: The male and female, larva, and pupa of Anomalopsyche minuta (Schmid) are described and figured and a new family, Anomalopsychidae, is proposed for this species and, tentatively, Contulma cranifer Flint.
Abstract: The male and female, larva, and pupa of Anomalopsyche minuta (Schmid) are described and figured. The new family, Anomalopsychidae, is proposed for this species and, tentatively, Contulma cranifer Flint. Additionally, undescribed and unassociated larvae and adults from Brazil, Colombia and Ecuador belong to this family. The family is the first undoubted member of the leptocerid branch of the Limnephiloidea found to possess ocelli. Although relationships are not absolutely certain, this neotropical taxon appears to be related to the Beraeidae and Helicophidae.
TL;DR: A new monotypic family, †Yantarocentridae (Insecta, Trichoptera), is described from Baltic amber, showing the new family to be placed as a sister lineage of higher Plenitentoria, including Lepidostomatidae, Brachycentridae and Limnephiloidea.
Abstract: A new monotypic family, †Yantarocentridae (Insecta, Trichoptera), is described from Baltic amber. The type species, Yantarocentrus gusakovi gen. et sp. nov., is a male showing good preservation of its head, palps, antennae and legs; the forewings are partially seen and the genitalia are faintly visible with translucent light. New characters of antenna have been introduced for the separation of this family from related taxa. The combination of characters shows the new family to be placed as a sister lineage of higher Plenitentoria, including Lepidostomatidae, Brachycentridae and Limnephiloidea. Some features, such as peculiar sensory fields on the antennae, are not found elsewhere in Trichoptera.http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:69D4D9B3-0336-4666-8DFE-3C5173592AD2
TL;DR: Morphological comparisons of these species revealed 14 unique homologues which support a close evolutionary link between the families Goeridae and Uenoidae, concurs with a current phylogenetic interpretation and is corroborated by ecological characteristics of the 2 families.
Abstract: First instars from a representative species of each of the limnephiloid families Coeridae, Brachycentridae, Lepidostomatidae, and Uenoidae and the sericostomatoid family Sericostomatidae were reared, described, and illustrated. Morphological comparisons of these species revealed 14 unique homologues which support a close evolutionary link between the families Goeridae and Uenoidae, This hypothesis concurs with a current phylogenetic interpretation and is corroborated by ecological characteristics of the 2 families, The study is an instructive example of the potential value of Ist-instar characters for phylogenetic interpretation in Trichoptera.
TL;DR: The first species-level descriptions of Ethiopian caddisfly larvae are provided, including those of O. mizrain and L. scotti, with additional notes on their habitats and distribution.
Abstract: The Ethiopian caddisfly fauna comprises 85 species, including 10 Oecetis species and three Lepidostoma species. In this context we provide the first species-level descriptions of Ethiopian caddisfly larvae. We describe and illustrate the larvae of O. mizrain and L. scotti, with additional notes on their habitats and distribution.