The giant Salmonflies of the Western mountains are legendary for their proclivity to elicit consistent dry-fly action and ferocious strikes.
Option 1 | Option 2 |
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Gills on abdominal segments 2-7 forked, long, and pointy, with margins fringed creating a "feathery" appearance | Gills on segments 2-7 variable; if gills are forked, long, and pointy, then their margins not fringed (source fig 13.6) |
Usually with mandibular tusks projected forward and visible from above head Or, if tusks absent, head and thorax with pads of long spines (source fig 13.8) | Mandibular tusks very rarely present |
Remaining families: Behningiidae, Ephemeridae, Euthyplociidae, Palingeniidae, Polymitarcyidae, and Potamanthidae | Remaining families: Acanthametropodidae, Ameletidae, Ametropodidae, Arthropleidae, Baetidae, Caenidae, Ephemerellidae, Heptageniidae, Isonychiidae, Leptohyphidae, Leptophlebiidae, Metretopodidae, Neoephemeridae, Oligoneuriidae, Pseudironidae, and Siphlonuridae |
5 Example Specimens | 5 Example Specimens |
Go to Couplet 3 | Go to Couplet 7 |