Dobsonfly

Subfamily of insects


title: "Dobsonfly" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["aquatic-insects", "corydalidae"] description: "Subfamily of insects" topic_path: "general/aquatic-insects" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobsonfly" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Subfamily of insects ::

| image = Corydalus cornutus MHNT.jpg | image_caption = Corydalus cornutus | taxon = Corydalinae | subdivision_ranks = Genera | subdivision = See Systematics

Dobsonflies are a subfamily of insects, Corydalinae, part of the Megalopteran family Corydalidae. The larvae (commonly called hellgrammites) are aquatic, living in streams, and the adults are often found along streams as well. The nine genera of dobsonflies are distributed in the Americas, Asia, and South Africa.

Etymology

The origin of the word "dobsonfly" is unclear. The term was in common use by at least 1878, as the records from the annual meeting of the Entomological Club of the American Association for the Advancement of Science that year contain:"In discussion it was stated that the somewhat peculiar name of the 'Hellgrammite Fly' for the Corydalis had been for many years in common use both on the Upper and Lower Mississippi and that the equally curious name of 'Dobson' was given to its larva, which was largely used for bait by the river fishermen."During this time there were also many more vernacular names for the larva. Below is a chart which shows some of the names in circulation and their locations in 1883, as heard from fishermen. :::::{| class="wikitable" |+ !Name !Location Documented |- |Dobson

Popular Use
Helgramite
Popular Use
-
The Crawler
Janesville, WI
-
Dam-worm
Fox and Rock Rivers, WI
-
The Andy
Fulton, NY
-
Black Crabs
Fulton, NY
-
White Crabs
Fulton, NY
-
Flying Crabs
Fulton, NY
-
Scrabbles
Broome County, NY
-
Molly-Grubs
Broome County, NY
-
Black Worms
Schenectady, NY
-
Flying Worms
Schenectady, NY
-
Stone Crab
Milford, NY
-
Sand Crab
Milford, NY
-
Hell Devils
Monroe, NY
-
The Dragon
Schoharie, NY
-
Clipper
Port Jervis, NY
Honesdale, PA
-
Conniption Bugs
Towanda, PA
-
Bogart
Portland, PA
-
Crawler
Perkiomen, PA
-
Ho Jack
Carlisle, PA
Pond Eddy, PA
-
Devil Catchers
Wyalusing, PA
-
Snake Doctor
Hanover, PA
-
Hiltamites
Tulpehocken Dam, PA
-
Alugmites
Tulpehocken Dam, PA
-
Stone Climber
Schuylkill River, PA
-
Clipper Bug
Schuylkill River, PA
-
The Devil
Hazleton, PA
-
Water Grampus
Lambertville, NJ
-
Goggle Goy
Tumble, NJ
-
Black Crab
Belvidere, NJ
-
Crock
Interior of NJ
-
Red Crab
Raleigh, NC
-
Yellow Crab
Raleigh, NC
-
Hell Divers
Raleigh, NC
-
Devil Catcher
location not given
-
Dobsill
location not given
-
Hell-Lion
location not given
-
Kill-Devil
location not given
}

Description

Adult dobsonflies are some of the largest non-Lepidopteran insects of temperate zones such as the United States and Canada, with a wingspan of up to 18 cm in some species of Corydalus. The Asian Acanthacorydalis fruhstorferi can have a wingspan of up to 21.6 cm, making it the largest dobsonfly and the largest aquatic insect in the world by this measurement. The wings vary from a grayish to translucent shade, depending on the species, and the anal region of the hindwing is wide and folded at rest. Despite the large wings, adults are weak, fluttery fliers. The body is soft and coloration varies from yellow to dark shades of brown.

Adult males of many—but not all—species are easily recognized by their long, curving mandibles. Examples of species with large-mandibled males include the genera Acanthacorydalis, Corydalus and Platyneuromus, while in Neoneuromus, Nevromus, Neurhermes and Protohermes the sexes are similar. In Corydalus cornutus, a particularly long-mandibled species, these can reach up to 4 cm in length and are used in competition for females. It is possible that the mandibles may have been selected as secondary sex characteristics used by females to evaluate males during courtship. Males cannot use these mandibles to bite because they are too long; on the other hand, females have short, heavily sclerotized mandibles which enable them to deliver powerful bites when threatened. Males of many species will also produce nuptial gifts in the form of packages of nutrient-rich spermatophores that are eaten by the female partner after mating. This has been shown to be correlated to mandible size; in species where the males have large mandibles the "nuptial gift" is small or absent, while it is large in species where males lack the exaggerated mandibles. Two genera, Chloroniella and Chloronia, are unusual in that the males lack large mandibles and do not produce "nuptial gifts". The antennae of males are also noticeably elongated, even longer than the mandibles.

Corydalinae is distinguished from closely related clades by the following synapomorphies (with exceptions in a few species): quadrate head with a postocular spine, ridge, and plane, non-pectinate antennae, four crossveins between the radius and the radial sector, and distinctive male terminalia with a well developed ninth gonostylus.

In regards to the larvae, entomologist John Henry Comstock wrote in his 1897 book Insect Life, "In spite of its disagreeable appearance it is in some respects very interesting to students of Nature study." The larvae, commonly called hellgrammites, are perhaps better known than the adults due to their more readily findable nature. They are unusual in that although they are generally aquatic, taking in dissolved oxygen through abdominal lateral filaments and tracheal gills, they also have spiracles that allow them to take in air directly when above water.

Larvae of dobsonflies differ from those of their sister clade, the alderflies, in that they bear eight pairs of lateral processes as well as anal prolegs with a pair of terminal hooks used to hold themselves to substrate, and also in that they lack a terminal filament. At the end of the abdomen is a pair of claw-like structures. Body color is black or dark brown.

Systematics

There are about sixty species of dobsonflies. suggests nine genera within Corydalinae, divided into four lineages. Working from "most basal" to "most derived" lineages, there are:

Diet and behavior

The larvae of dobsonflies live along the rocky bottoms of streams. Chiefly active during the night, they ambush prey in the middle of riffles which supply plenty of oxygen and stir up prey. They are generalist predators; dissections have revealed that they primarily eat aquatic immatures of mayflies, caddisflies, stoneflies, and chironomid midges. Although the larvae spend most of their lives under rocks below water, locals along Virginia and Pennsylvania rivers have reported emergences, known as "hellgrammite crawlings," during thunderstorms.

The adults are also nocturnal, and are seldom seen as they hide under leaves in the canopy during the daytime. However, they do sometimes form aggregations under bridges or other structures along streams. Since the adults live only about a week, they are not known to eat anything, although they have been reported to drink sweet solution in captivity.

The dobsonfly may be attracted by mercaptan, an indicator additive in natural gas and propane, and may behave as an animal sentinel in the presence of these gases.

Life cycle

The metamorphosis from larva to adult in dobsonflies is one of the simplest of the holometabolous orders, yet the life cycle begins with an intriguing ritualized courtship display (most of the following comes from Simonsen et al. 2008 and all pertains to Corydalus; other courtship rituals remain unknown). Males compete with each other for females, aggressively fluttering the wings and trying to place their long mandibles underneath the body of the opponent in order to flip him into the air. Afterwards, the male approaches a female from the side and touches her with his antennae. At first the female reacts somewhat aggressively, moving the head from side to side with mandibles wide apart. However, she then allows the male to come closer and place his mandibles over her wings in a perpendicular position, a position he holds until the female signals reception to mating.

At least in Protohermes, during copulation the male attaches to the female's genitalia a large, globular spermatophore about 4 mm long and wide. The spermatophore consists of two parts: a large gelatinous mass, and a smaller seminal duct containing the sperm. After copulation, the female proceeds to spread her legs wide apart, curl the abdomen under the chest, and eat the gelatinous part of the spermatophore.

Oviposition occurs along rocky walls of streams at night, from May to September in Corydalus. The females deposit coin-size egg masses containing on average one thousand grey, cylindrical eggs, each egg about 1.5 mm long and 0.5 mm wide. This mass is covered by a layer of a chalky, white substance, which probably protects the eggs from desiccation and overheating. Females tend to deposit egg masses at relatively few sites, resulting in grouped egg masses.

One to two weeks after oviposition, the eggs hatch and the first instar larvae either fall directly into the stream or if not, immediately search for water. There the larvae live for up to five years, going through 10-12 instar molts. The pupae are yellow-orange with dark spots on the dorsum of the abdomen, covered in minute setae, and exarate (i.e. the developing appendages and mouthparts are attached only at their proximal ends). Finally, the pupae emerge from the chamber, leaving behind the larval and pupal skins.

Uses

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Hellgrammite_in_TN_stream.JPG" caption="Hellgrammite (larval form of the dobsonfly) found in a Tennessee stream"] ::

Hellgrammites are popular among anglers as bait due to their large size, endurance, and ferocious temperament. Smallmouth bass, in particular, are very attracted to hellgrammites as bait, due to the insects' active movement in the water. John Henry Comstock

Although not to the same extent as the larvae of mayflies and caddisflies, hellgrammites are intolerant of polluted waters and may have potential to be used as indicators of water quality.

As the adults are strongly attracted to lights, entomologists and collectors often use black light and mercury-vapor light traps to capture them.

Gallery

File: Protohermes grandis.jpg|Protohermes grandis File:Corydalus cornutus MHNT.jpg|Corydalus cornutus File:NevromusAustroindicus4.jpg|Nevromus austroindicus Image:Dobsonfly Corydalus cornutus larvae.jpg|Corydalus cornutus hellgrammite

References

References

  1. Entomological Society of Ontario. (1878). "Annual Report of the Entomological Society of Ontario, 1877-1878". Entomological Society of Ontario.
  2. "Best Bait for the Black Bass". The American Angler.
  3. Stange, Lionel. "Alderflies and Dobsonflies." Encyclopedia of Entomology. 2nd ed. New York: Springer Publishing, 2008.
  4. "Largest aquatic insect (by wingspan)".
  5. Li, Zoe. (July 22, 2014). "World's largest aquatic insect specimen found in China". CNN.
  6. (2005). "Phylogenetic review of the Chinese species of Acanthacorydalis (Megaloptera, Corydalidae)". Zoologica Scripta.
  7. (2015). "Is diversification in male reproductive traits driven by evolutionary trade-offs between weapons and nuptial gifts?". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
  8. Simonsen, T. J., Dombroskie, J. J., and D. D. Lawrie (2008). Behavioral Observations on the Dobsonfly, ''Corydalus cornutus'' (Megaloptera: Corydalidae) with Photographic Evidence of the Use of the Elongate Mandibles in the Male. American Entomologist 64 167-169.
  9. Comstock, John Henry (1897). Insect Life. Cornell University Library. Online.
  10. Contreras-Ramos, Atilano. ''Corydalus''. Tree of Life Web Project. November 15, 1997.
  11. Borror, Donald; Triplehorn, Charles; and Norman Johnson. An Introduction to the Study of Insects. 6th ed. New York: Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 1989. 358-363.
  12. Hayashi, Fumio (1989). Radio Tracking and Activity Monitoring of the Dobsonfly Larva, ''Protohermes grandis'' (Megaloptera: Corydalidae). Oecologia 78 468-472.
  13. Hayashi, Fumio (1988). Prey selection by the dobsonfly larva, ''Protohermes grandis'' (Megaloptera: Corydalidae). Freshwater Biology 20 19-29.
  14. Hall, Donald. Eastern Dobsonfly. Featured Creatures. University of Florida. April 2013.
  15. Hayashi, Fumio (1992). Large spermatophore production and consumption in dobsonflies ''Protohermes''. Japanese Journal of Entomology 60 59-66.
  16. Mangan, Brian (1992). Oviposition of the Dobsonfly (''Corydalus cornutus'', Megaloptera) on a Large River. American Midland Naturalist 127 348-354.
  17. Although the males have a small tubercle on the [[prothoracic]] sternum and a slightly wider head than the females, the mandibles are not as noticeably divergent as in the adults.Mangan, Brian (1994). Pupation Ecology of the Dobsonfly ''Corydalus cornutus'' (Corydalidae: Megaloptera) along a Large River. Journal of Freshwater Ecology 9 57-62.
  18. Contreras-Ramos, A. Corydalinae. Tree of Life Web Project. November 15, 1997.
  19. https://www.nps.gov/neri/learn/nature/hellgrammites.htm
  20. link. (2014-10-06 Purdue Agriculture News Columns. Purdue Extension. August 8, 2013.)
  21. Gullan, P. J., and P. S. Cranston. The Insects: An Outline of Entomology. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Blackwell, 2004. 260.

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aquatic-insectscorydalidae