I went to the Doyles River in Doylesville last week -- but I didn't find anything new or exciting. There are still some common stoneflies here, genus Perlesta, and I also saw a young Acroneuria. Lots of netspinners, fingernets, and flatheaded mayflies (genus Maccaffertium, and a few Epeorus vitreus). I also found a few small minnow mayflies, genus Baetis, and I'll show you a photo of one of those in a minute. But the water was low, and with the heat we're having this week, it's bound to drop even more. So, for the moment, I think I'll stick with the big river -- the Rivanna itself: that seems to be where the action is at the moment.
But I did find the interesting caddis larva in the photo above. This one fooled me. It was long, maybe 3/4", and big and orange. And with abdominal segments that are pretty constricted, my guess at the stream was that it was a freeliving caddis. However, when I downloaded my photos at home and noticed the gray "freckles" (muscle scars) on top of the head, my thoughts went right away to Polycentropodidae, a "trumpet net" caddisfly larva. There's only one way to know that for sure -- you have to check the shape of the fore trochantin using a microscope. The fore trochantin (the joint where the front leg meets the body) should come to a sharp point -- sort of looks like a pick-axe.
So, no doubt about it: it was indeed a Polycentropodid. What about the genus ID? That's also easy to determine using a good microscope. This one is Polycentropus. How do we know? The "suture" on the anal proleg of Polycentropus consists of a black "X".
Polycentropodids, by the way, have a tolerance value of "6.0" in the VA DEQ list of tolerance values: in the NC DWQ list, the genus Polycentropus comes in at "3.1". Since I was thrown off by the color, let me remind you of what they normally look like: this is a photo of one from the Doyles, that I posted back at the beginning of May.
Two more photos. The first, a lovely little flatheaded mayfly, Epeorus vitreus. We find these all summer long in our "good," cold water streams -- though never in very large numbers.
The other, a small minnow mayfly, genus Baetis. I don't know the species. But I've been finding this species in a lot of streams now (at least I think it's the same species I'm seeing). It's very small -- every one I've seen has been small -- and not very colorful. But they may be small and lacking in color because they're immature. Note that the wingpads are not very long.
Excellent info in this line "There are still some common stoneflies here, genus Perlesta, and I also saw a young Acroneuria. Lots of netspinners, fingernets, and flatheaded mayflies (genus Maccaffertium, and a few Epeorus vitreus)."
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