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Lateral view of a Female Hexagenia limbata (Ephemeridae) (Hex) Mayfly Dun from the Namekagon River in Wisconsin
Hex Mayflies
Hexagenia limbata

The famous nocturnal Hex hatch of the Midwest (and a few other lucky locations) stirs to the surface mythically large brown trout that only touch streamers for the rest of the year.

Dorsal view of a Epeorus albertae (Heptageniidae) (Pink Lady) Mayfly Nymph from the East Fork Issaquah Creek in Washington
This specimen keys to the Epeorus albertae group of species. Of the five species in that group, the two known in Washington state are Epeorus albertae and Epeorus dulciana. Of the two, albertae has been collected in vastly more locations in Washington than dulciana, suggesting it is far more common. On that basis alone I'm tentatively putting this nymph in albertae, with the large caveat that there's no real information to rule out dulciana.
27" brown trout, my largest ever. It was the sub-dominant fish in its pool. After this, I hooked the bigger one, but I couldn't land it.
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Mayfly Species Plauditus punctiventris (Tiny Western Olives)

This species produces very strong hatches on fertile Western spring creeks. They are extremely small mayflies but may be extremely numerous.

Where & when

Time of year : Late June and early July; again in late September and early October

Preferred waters: Spring creeks

In 8 records from GBIF, adults of this species have been collected during May (38%), July (25%), June (25%), and April (13%).

In 5 records from GBIF, this species has been collected at elevations ranging from 618 to 6270 ft, with an average (median) of 5249 ft.

Species Range

Hatching behavior

Time of day : Sporadically from late morning on; compressed to near dusk on warm days

Nymph biology

Substrate: Gravel, vegetation

Physical description

Most physical descriptions on Troutnut are direct or slightly edited quotes from the original scientific sources describing or updating the species, although there may be errors in copying them to this website. Such descriptions aren't always definitive, because species often turn out to be more variable than the original describers observed. In some cases, only a single specimen was described! However, they are useful starting points.

Nymph

Described in Ide (1937) as Pseudocloeon punctiventris
Body length: 4.6–5.7 mm

A pale nymph which in life is bright chlorophyll green.

Head: Head and mouth parts pale and of typical Pseudocloeon form; antennae pale, reaching back to about middle of mesothorax.

Thorax: In general pale with some light greenish dorsal maculation; legs pale and immaculate; tarsal claws pectinate at base.

Abdomen: Dorsal maculation of pale marks on a light greenish background; an indistinct pale median band and pale lateral flanges; a pair of slightly darkened dots in the middle of each segment forming submedian rows and in front of these darkened indistinct dashes converging on the anterior border; ventrally a median row of small jet black dots the latter situated about the middle of the segment in the anterior of segments (sometimes these present in only two or three anterior segments and entirely absent in occasional individuals); these dots persist in the adult; lateral caudal filaments with a dark bar about halfway out; median filament relatively long for a Pseudocloeon measuring in length about twice the width of a lateral filament at the base and composed of several segments; gills relatively clear without conspicuous tracheae; these may be somewhat more prominent in fresh material.

Male Spinner

Described in Needham et al (1935) as Pseudocloeon punctiventris
Body length: 3-4 mm
Wing length: 4-4.5 mm

Abdominal tergites 2-6 of male imago whitish hyaline; a mid-ventral row of minute dots on posterior margins of sternites.

Turbinate eyes almost circular, larger than in P. dubium (now a synonym of Plauditus dubius); light yellow-brown, stalk paler, with a purplish brown ring just above the base. Face blackish, antennae and base of ocelli tinged with pale yellowish green. Antennae black, the tips paler; pale ring at apex of first joint. Thorax blackish, shaded laterally with pale olive; slight greenish markings on anterior portion of mesonotum, its lateral margin, and on the scutellum; metanotal projection marked with greenish. Legs whitish; fore femur usually with smoky tinge. Wings hyaline. Abdominal segments 2-6 whitish hyaline; faint black dots over each spiracle. Tergites 7-10 light brown, ruddier than in P. dubium; sternites opaque white. On the posterior margin of each sternite, at the midventral line, is a minute dot.

The lack of submedian red dots on tergites 2-6 and the paler apical tergites separates this species from P. virile (now a synonym of Plauditus virilis); the absence of red patches on the tergites distinguishes it from P. rubrolaterale (now a synonym of Iswaeon rubrolaterale); while the presence of mid-ventral dots sets it apart from P. dubium.


Start a Discussion of Plauditus punctiventris

References

Mayfly Species Plauditus punctiventris (Tiny Western Olives)

Taxonomy
Species Range
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