Fluidr
about   tools   help   Y   Q   a         b   n   l
User / CrazyBugLady / Sets / Mayflies
Linda Peall / 3 items

  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • MAP
  • O
  • L
  • M

1,000's of Mayflies were emerging as we walked along the Thames Path from Richmond to Hampton Court Palace on Sunday. It was an incredible sight! The fact they were emerging at this time of your suggests they may have been Ephemera danica, which emerge as adults when the Mayflower or Hawthorn is in bloom!

Having said this, the common name ‘Mayfly’ is quite misleading because this group of insects can appear throughout the year. In fact, at one point they were called dayflies due to some of the species having an adult life of a single day. The common name comes from the habit of one species, Ephemera danica, which emerge as adults when the Mayflower or Hawthorn is in bloom.

Although some species only live for as single day, or even just a few hours as adults, there are individuals or species that can live a bit longer than that. In fact most of the life of a mayfly is spent out of sight as a nymph.

Mayflies start life as an egg on the bed of the river, before hatching into a nymph. The nymphs feed on algae and other vegetable matter on the bed for up to two years in some species, before emerging from the surface of the water as an adult.

Mayflies are unique as insects in having two winged adult stages. After emerging from the water they fly to the bank where they shelter on the underside of leaves or in the grass. They then moult again, leaving behind their drab ‘dun’ skin to reveal their shiny ‘spinner’ skin. Following this moult they fly back to the water and form mating swarms dancing above the surface.

Mayflies were one of the first winged insects, with fossils dating back over 300 million years – long before the dinosaurs! There are 51 species of mayfly known from the British Isles today and they range in size from less than 5mm to over 20mm.

Mayfly larvae, and the mayfly adults emerging from the water, are a vital source of food for many other freshwater creatures, especially fish such as trout and salmon. Mayflies, and other riverflies, help ensure that our rivers, lakes and streams are home to a rich variety of wildlife.
- See more at: www.buglife.org.uk/bugs-and-habitats/mayfly#sthash.A1VvMq...

Tags:   Thames Path Ephemeroptera Mayfly Insect Invertebrate May 2015 Spring Buttercups Moulting Emerging Spinner Skin Ham Lands Nature Reserve Richmond London River Thames

  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • MAP
  • O
  • L
  • M

A newly emerged Mayfly resting under some cow parsley leaves! I just like the way it is silhouetted against the light!

Tags:   Thames Path Mayfly Silhouette Insect May 2015 Spring Green Richmond Ham Lands Nature Reserve London River Thames

  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • MAP
  • O
  • L
  • M

Just one of many Mayflies seen along the River Gipping near Bramford in Suffolk. Happy Wing Wednesday everyone!

Apparently, there are 51 different kinds of mayflies found in Britain. Even though anglers and some biologists call them mayflies are called by anglers, ‘riverflies’, about half the British species can be found in still waters and 10 are commonly seen in ponds. If anyone can help with an ID that would be great!

Tags:   Mayfly Riverfly Insect Invertebrate Wing Wednesday Grass River Gipping Bramford Suffolk June 2021 Summer


100%