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Lateral view of a Male Baetis (Baetidae) (Blue-Winged Olive) Mayfly Dun from Mystery Creek #43 in New York
Blue-winged Olives
Baetis

Tiny Baetis mayflies are perhaps the most commonly encountered and imitated by anglers on all American trout streams due to their great abundance, widespread distribution, and trout-friendly emergence habits.

Case view of a Pycnopsyche guttifera (Limnephilidae) (Great Autumn Brown Sedge) Caddisfly Larva from the Yakima River in Washington
It's only barely visible in one of my pictures, but I confirmed under the microscope that this one has a prosternal horn and the antennae are mid-way between the eyes and front of the head capsule.

I'm calling this one Pycnopsyche, but it's a bit perplexing. It seems to key definitively to at least Couplet 8 of the Key to Genera of Limnephilidae Larvae. That narrows it down to three genera, and the case seems wrong for the other two. The case looks right for Pycnopsyche, and it fits one of the key characteristics: "Abdominal sternum II without chloride epithelium and abdominal segment IX with only single seta on each side of dorsal sclerite." However, the characteristic "metanotal sa1 sclerites not fused, although often contiguous" does not seem to fit well. Those sclerites sure look fused to me, although I can make out a thin groove in the touching halves in the anterior half under the microscope. Perhaps this is a regional variation.

The only species of Pycnopsyche documented in Washington state is Pycnopsyche guttifera, and the colors and markings around the head of this specimen seem to match very well a specimen of that species from Massachusetts on Bugguide. So I am placing it in that species for now.

Whatever species this is, I photographed another specimen of seemingly the same species from the same spot a couple months later.
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.
Troutnut is a project started in 2003 by salmonid ecologist Jason "Troutnut" Neuswanger to help anglers and fly tyers unabashedly embrace the entomological side of the sport. Learn more about Troutnut or support the project for an enhanced experience here.

Identification: Key to Orders of Aquatic Insect Larvae and Wingless Adults, Couplet 2

Identification: Key to Orders of Aquatic Insect Larvae and Wingless Adults, Couplet 2

Option 1Option 2
Three pairs of jointed legs on thorax
Figure from this Corydalus larva.
True legs absent; fleshy, leg-like protuberances or prolegs may be present on thorax, but fewer than three pairs and not jointed
Remaining orders: Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Megaloptera, Neuroptera, and TrichopteraRemaining orders: Coleoptera, Diptera, and Hymenoptera
5 Example Specimens
5 Example Specimens
Go to Couplet 3 Go to Couplet 8
The current couplet is highlighted with darker colors and a icon, and couplets leading to this point have a icon.
Leads to Collembola:
  • Abdomen with 6 or fewer segments and a ventral tube
  • Body tiny, 5 mm or less
  • Most with a forked structure (furcula) at tip of abdomen
Leads to Couplet 2:
  • Abdomen with more than 6 segments and without a ventral tube
  • Body size variable, often > 5 mm
Couplet 2
Couplet 2

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Couplet 2 (You are here)
Leads to Couplet 3:
  • Three pairs of jointed legs on thorax
Couplet 3
Leads to Couplet 8:
  • True legs absent; fleshy, leg-like protuberances or prolegs may be present on thorax, but fewer than three pairs and not jointed
Couplet 8
Leads to Hemiptera:
  • Middle and hind legs long and slender, extending considerably beyond the abdomen
  • Compound eyes present
Leads to Couplet 4:
  • Legs not longer than abdomen
  • Compound eyes absent
Couplet 4
Leads to Lepidoptera:
  • Abdomen with at least 2 pairs (usually 5 pairs) of ventral, fleshy, leg-like protuberances tipped with tiny hooks (prolegs with crochets)
Leads to Couplet 5:
  • Abdomen without paired, ventral, leg-like protuberances, or, if present, not tipped with tiny hooks
Couplet 5
Leads to Trichoptera:
  • Last abdominal segment with lateral appendages bearing sclerotized, hook-like anal claws
  • Antennae 1-segmented, inconspicuous
  • Gills, if present, seldom confined to lateral margins of body
  • Larvae frequently live in cases made of sand grains or bits of plant matter, but some are free-living
Leads to Couplet 6:
  • Last abdominal segment without anal claws
  • If anal claws present, antennae have more than 1 segment
  • Gills inserted laterally
Couplet 6
Leads to Neuroptera:
  • Mandibles and maxillae united at each side to form long, straight or slightly recurved, thread-like suctorial tubes
  • Laterally inserted, segmented gills folded beneath abdomen
  • Small, 10 mm or less Found in or on freshwater sponges
Neuroptera
Leads to Couplet 7:
  • Mandibles not united with maxillae into long tubes; if mandibles suctorial, then strongly curved, sickle-shaped
  • Gills seldom segmented and not folded beneath abdomen
Couplet 7
Leads to Megaloptera:
  • Abdomen with 7-8 pairs of lateral filaments or gills, arranged 1 pair on each segment
  • Paired terminal anal prolegs each with 2 claws or a single, medial, caudal filament
Leads to Coleoptera:
  • Abdomen usually without lateral gills; if segmental gills present, then (a) only a single terminal anal proleg with 4 claws, otherwise anal hooks absent, or (b) segment 10 with 4 gills, or (c) caudal appendages paired or absent but never single
Leads to Couplet 9:
  • Head capsule distinct, partly or entirely hardened, and usually pigmented, but may be deeply withdrawn in prothorax
Couplet 9
Leads to Couplet 10:
  • Head capsule absent, not distinct, hardened, or pigmented, often consisting of a few pale rods
Couplet 10
Leads to Diptera:
  • Posterior end of body with at least one or a combination of gills, hair brushes, a sucker, or breathing tube
Leads to Coleoptera:
  • Posterior end of body simple or with small processes or isolated hairs, but without gills, brushes, suckers, or breathing tubes
Leads to Diptera:
  • Body often 5 mm or larger, elongate, somewhat cylindrical, spindle-shaped or maggot-like
  • Mouthparts may be reduced to a pair of retractile mouth hooks that move vertically
Leads to Hymenoptera:
  • Body usually 5 mm or less
  • Mouthparts may be reduced to a pair of opposable, acute mandibles that move horizontally
  • Parasitoids on or inside insect hosts

Start a Discussion of this Couplet

References

Orders excluded
These orders of Insecta are not included in this key: Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Odonata-Anisoptera, Odonata-Zygoptera, Orthoptera, Psocodea
Description of this key
This key only covers insect orders whose juvenile stages are typically referred to as larvae. Invertebrates that have nymphs instead are not included.
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