Journal article
Egg masses of some stream-dwelling caddisflies (Trichoptera: Hydrobiosidae) from Victoria, Australia
Jill Lancaster, Alena Glaister
Austral Entomology | Wiley | Published : 2019
DOI: 10.1111/aen.12360
Abstract
Eggs are a largely neglected life stage in most ecological studies of aquatic insects, despite the importance of oviposition behaviour and fecundity estimates for many research questions. Incorporating egg stages into ecological research requires that ecologists can identify and quantify eggs, but descriptions of eggs and egg masses are scarce for many groups and particularly for Australian taxa. This paper focusses on stream-dwelling caddisflies in the family Hydrobiosidae and provides species-level identifications, morphological descriptions and images of egg masses of some species that commonly occur in south-eastern Australia. All the species we identified laid plaque-shaped egg masses a..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by a Discovery grant from the Australian Research Council (DP 160102262). Field work was carried out with a Research Permit (No. 10007855) under the National Parks Act (Australia), from the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, Victoria. We are grateful to John Dean for help identifying some early instar larvae; to Hung Thi Hong Vu and Rebecca Reid for supplying chironomid eggs; to Wim Bovill and Barb Downes for constructive comments on the manuscript.