Freshwater-predators

Guides

  • Aciliini

    Aciliini is a tribe of predaceous diving beetles within the family Dytiscidae, containing approximately 7 genera and at least 69-70 extant species. The tribe includes well-known genera such as Acilius, Graphoderus, and Thermonectus, which are medium to large-sized beetles found in freshwater habitats. Members are recognized as active predators in aquatic ecosystems.

  • Pleidae

    pygmy backswimmers, pleids

    Pleidae, the pygmy backswimmers, is a family of minute aquatic true bugs (Hemiptera: Nepomorpha) containing approximately 52 species in four genera. Adults measure only 2–3.5 mm and inhabit stagnant or slow-moving freshwater with abundant vegetation. They are predatory, feeding on mosquito larvae and other small arthropods, and swim upside-down while carrying an air reserve beneath the body. The family is distributed worldwide except polar regions and remote oceanic islands, with genus Plea in the Old World, Neoplea in the Americas, Paraplea globally in warmer regions, and the recently described Heteroplea from Venezuela.