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   » Wiki: Aquatic Insect
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Aquatic insects or water insects live some portion of their life cycle in the water. They feed in the same ways as other . Some diving insects, such as , can hunt for food underwater where land-living insects cannot compete.


Breathing
One problem that aquatic insects must overcome is how to get while they are under water. Almost all animals require a source of oxygen to live. Insects draw air into their bodies through spiracles, holes found along the sides of the . These spiracles are connected to tracheal tubes where oxygen can be absorbed. All aquatic insects have become adapted to their environment with the specialization of these structures
Aquatic adaptations
  1. Simple diffusion over a relatively thin
  2. Temporary use of an air bubble
  3. Extraction of oxygen from water using a plastron or
  4. Storage of oxygen in and molecules in
  5. Taking oxygen from surface via breathing tubes (siphons)

The nymphs of the orders mayflies, dragonflies and stoneflies, and the larvae of the orders and caddisflies, possess tracheal gills, which are outgrowths of the body wall containing a dense network of tracheae covered by a thin cuticle through which oxygen in the water can diffuse.

(2020). 9780520963573, Univ of California Press. .
Bionomics and Ecological Services of Megaloptera Larvae (Dobsonflies, Fishflies, Alderflies)

Some insects have densely packed hairs () around the spiracles that allow air to remain near, while keeping water away from, the body. The trachea open through spiracles into this air film, allowing access to oxygen. In many such cases, when the insect dives into the water, it carries a layer of air over parts of its surface, and breathes using this trapped air bubble until it is depleted, then returns to the surface to repeat the process. Other types of insects have a plastron or physical gill that can be various combinations of hairs, scales, and undulations projecting from the cuticle, which hold a thin layer of air along the outer surface of the body. In these insects, the volume of the film is small enough, and their respiration slow enough, that from the surrounding water is enough to replenish the oxygen in the pocket of air as fast as it is used. The large proportion of in the air dissolves in water slowly and maintains the gas volume, supporting oxygen diffusion. Insects of this type only rarely need to replenish their supply of air.

Other aquatic insects can remain under water for long periods due to high concentrations of hemoglobin in their hemolymph circulating freely within their body. Hemoglobin bonds strongly to oxygen molecules.

A few insects such as and have breathing tubes ("siphons") with the opening surrounded by hairs, allowing them to breathe without having to leave the water.


Orders with aquatic or semiaquatic species

EPT insects, an for Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera (mayflies, stoneflies and caddisflies), are sensitive to pollutants and are used as an indicator of water quality in streams, rivers and lakes. Watershed Science Institute - USDA


Marine aquatic insects
Aquatic insects live mostly in freshwater habitats, and there are very few marine insect species. Why are there so few insects at sea? Deutsche Welle, 9 July 2018. The only true examples of insects are the , which belongs to the order Hemiptera, and there are a few types of insects that live in the , including larvae of from the family , the hemipteran Aepophilus bonnairei,
(1976). 9780444112132, North-Holland Publishing Co.. .
and a few other taxa.

  • Wigglesworth, Vincent B. Sir (1964). The life of insects. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London


External links
  • Insect stages - "Some larvae, nymphs and adult insects that live in freshwater." A UK-based web site with microscopic photos of various insects and other microorganisms as well as biological information.

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