Net-winged-midge

Guides

  • Agathon comstocki

    Comstock's Net-winged Midge

    Agathon comstocki is a species of net-winged midge in the family Blephariceridae, described by Kellogg in 1903. The common name honors the American entomologist John Henry Comstock. Net-winged midges in this family are specialized for life in fast-flowing aquatic environments, with larvae adapted to cling to rocks in turbulent water. The species is rarely encountered and poorly documented in scientific literature.

  • Bibiocephala grandis

    Bibiocephala grandis is a species of net-winged midge in the family Blephariceridae, a group of specialized aquatic flies. The species was described by Osten Sacken in 1874. Members of Blephariceridae are typically associated with fast-flowing streams and rivers, where larvae attach to rocks in turbulent water.

  • Blepharicera

    net-winged midge

    The genus Blepharicera Macquart, 1843 comprises net-winged midges in the family Blephariceridae, with approximately 60 species worldwide and 12 known species in China. It is the most species-rich blepharicerid genus in China, concentrated in Southwest China. The genus is characterized by distinctive wing venation with net-like patterns of folds and transversely divided compound eyes. Recent taxonomic work has expanded knowledge through DNA barcoding and descriptions of new species from China and North America.

  • Philorus

    Philorus is a genus of net-winged midges in the family Blephariceridae, established by Kellogg in 1903. Members of this genus are aquatic flies whose larvae inhabit fast-flowing streams and rivers, where they attach to rocks using specialized sucking discs. The genus is part of a family notable for having some of the most highly specialized larval adaptations among Diptera for life in torrential waters.