Dobsonflies are a subfamily of , Corydalinae, part of the family Corydalidae. The (commonly called hellgrammites) are aquatic insect, living in , and the adults are often found along streams as well. The nine genera of dobsonflies are distributed in the Americas, Asia, and South Africa.
Adult males of many—but not all—species are easily recognized by their long, curving mandibles. Examples of species with large-mandibled males include the genera Acanthacorydalis, Corydalus and Platyneuromus, while in Neoneuromus, Nevromus, Neurhermes and Protohermes the sexes are similar. In Corydalus cornutus, a particularly long-mandibled species, these can reach up to in length and are used in competition for females.Simonsen, T. J., Dombroskie, J. J., and D. D. Lawrie (2008). Behavioral Observations on the Dobsonfly, Corydalus cornutus (Megaloptera: Corydalidae) with Photographic Evidence of the Use of the Elongate Mandibles in the Male. American Entomologist 64 167-169. It is possible that the mandibles may have been sexual selection as secondary sex characteristics used by females to evaluate males during courtship. Males cannot use these mandibles to bite because they are too long; on the other hand, females have short, heavily sclerite mandibles which enable them to deliver powerful bites when threatened. Males of many species will also produce in the form of packages of nutrient-rich spermatophores that are eaten by the female partner after mating. This has been shown to be correlated to mandible size; in species where the males have large mandibles the "nuptial gift" is small or absent, while it is large in species where males lack the exaggerated mandibles. Two genera, Chloroniella and Chloronia, are unusual in that the males lack large mandibles and do not produce "nuptial gifts". The antennae of males are also noticeably elongated, even longer than the mandibles.
Corydalinae is distinguished from closely related clades by the following synapomorphies (with exceptions in a few species): quadrate head with a postocular spine, ridge, and plane, non-pectinate antennae, four crossveins between the radius and the radial sector, and distinctive male terminalia with a well developed ninth gonostylus.
In regards to the larvae, entomologist John Henry Comstock wrote in his 1897 book Insect Life,Comstock, John Henry (1897). Insect Life. Cornell University Library. Online. "In spite of its disagreeable appearance it is in some respects very interesting to students of Nature study." The larvae, commonly called hellgrammites, are perhaps better known than the adults due to their more readily findable nature. They are unusual in that although they are generally aquatic, taking in dissolved oxygen through abdominal lateral filaments and tracheal gills, they also have spiracles that allow them to take in air directly when above water.Contreras-Ramos, Atilano. Corydalus. Tree of Life Web Project. November 15, 1997.
Larvae of dobsonflies differ from those of their sister clade, the alderflies, in that they bear eight pairs of lateral processes as well as anal prolegs with a pair of terminal hooks used to hold themselves to substrate, and also in that they lack a terminal filament.Borror, Donald; Triplehorn, Charles; and Norman Johnson. An Introduction to the Study of Insects. 6th ed. New York: Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 1989. 358-363. At the end of the abdomen is a pair of claw-like structures. Body color is black or dark brown.
The adults are also nocturnal, and are seldom seen as they hide under leaves in the canopy during the daytime. However, they do sometimes form aggregations under bridges or other structures along streams. Since the adults live only about a week, they are not known to eat anything, although they have been reported to drink sweet solution in captivity.
The dobsonfly may be attracted by mercaptan, an indicator additive in natural gas and propane, and may behave as an animal sentinel in the presence of these gases.
At least in Protohermes, during copulation the male attaches to the female's insect genitalia a large, globular spermatophore about long and wide. The spermatophore consists of two parts: a large gelatinous mass, and a smaller seminal duct containing the sperm. After copulation, the female proceeds to spread her legs wide apart, curl the abdomen under the chest, and Nuptial gift.Hayashi, Fumio (1992). Large spermatophore production and consumption in dobsonflies Protohermes. Japanese Journal of Entomology 60 59-66.
Oviposition occurs along rocky walls of streams at night, from May to September in Corydalus.Mangan, Brian (1992). Oviposition of the Dobsonfly ( Corydalus cornutus, Megaloptera) on a Large River. American Midland Naturalist 127 348-354. The females deposit coin-size egg masses containing on average one thousand grey, cylindrical eggs, each egg about long and wide. This mass is covered by a layer of a chalky, white substance, which probably protects the eggs from desiccation and overheating. Females tend to deposit egg masses at relatively few sites, resulting in grouped egg masses.
One to two weeks after oviposition, the eggs hatch and the first instar larvae either fall directly into the stream or if not, immediately search for water. There the larvae live for up to five years, going through 10-12 instar moulting. When they have finally reached maturity, the larvae leave the water and find a rock, log, or anthropogenic debris, typically close to the stream but sometimes up to 40 m away. There they construct a chamber for pupation and spend several days to several weeks as prepupae before shedding the exoskeleton and spending about a week to two weeks as pupae. The pupae are yellow-orange with dark spots on the dorsum of the abdomen, covered in minute setae, and exarate (i.e. the developing appendages and mouthparts are attached only at their proximal ends). Although the males have a small tubercle on the prothoracic sternum and a slightly wider head than the females, the mandibles are not as noticeably divergent as in the adults.Mangan, Brian (1994). Pupation Ecology of the Dobsonfly Corydalus cornutus (Corydalidae: Megaloptera) along a Large River. Journal of Freshwater Ecology 9 57-62. Finally, the pupae emerge from the chamber, leaving behind the larval and pupal Exuviae.
Although not to the same extent as the larvae of mayflies and caddisflies, hellgrammites are intolerant of Water pollution and may have potential to be used as indicators of water quality.Gullan, P. J., and P. S. Cranston. The Insects: An Outline of Entomology. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Blackwell, 2004. 260.
As the adults are strongly attracted to lights, entomologists and collectors often use Blacklight and mercury-vapor light traps to capture them.
==Gallery==
Systematics
Diet and behavior
Life cycle
Uses
/ref> John Henry Comstock suggested securing a net or wire screen to the rocky bottom of a creek and disturbing the rocks just upstream of the screen as a method to catch the larvae. They often run for relatively high prices at bait shops, leading to over-exploitation in some areas and regulation of sale in certain states. Some anglers instead use fishing lure in the shape of hellgrammites.Turpin, T. Dobsonflies Look Vicious. Purdue Agriculture News Columns. Purdue Extension. August 8, 2013.
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