Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Exploring new waters: Rose River, Madison County
I'd like to explore some new streams in the winter and spring, so yesterday I went up to the Rose River in Madison County. It's good water, known for some of the best trout fishing in central Virginia. While I found a lot of good insects, I was surprised by the number of midges I found but pleased with the photos I got of them.
If you monitor streams, you come to expect these little larvae in your nets. You might -- mistakenly, as it turns out -- assume that all midges are "tolerant" critters that indicate so-so water. That's not true at all. In North Carolina's list of tolerance values, there must be 500-1000 species of Chironomids listed, and they run the full range of TV's from 0.0 to 10. So as it turns out there are "good" midges out there, and I suspect that's true of the ones I found yesterday given the quality of the water involved. This is where I was looking.
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I didn't find anything new yesterday, but I did find of couple of nymphs that, before this, I had only found at the Rapidan River: the common stonefly, Agnetina capitata,
and the spiny crawler mayfly, Ephemerella subvaria.
I plan to back to the Rose in the winter and spring. I expect to see some pretty good insects -- maybe even something new!
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A couple good photos of a brushlegged mayfly. Still no way to key out the species.
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(I might add, by the way, for our readers who are fly fishermen, that almost all of the midges we see are this color. Helps to know that for midge imitations.)
I think the midge in the photo could be a Diamesa (sub-family Diamesinae). Larvae of many Diamesa species are cool-adapted, inhabiting flowing water/springs.
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