Platycentropus
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Platycentropus
''Platycentropus'' is a genus of northern caddisflies in the family Limnephilidae. There are at least three described species in ''Platycentropus''. Species These three species belong to the genus ''Platycentropus'': * '' Platycentropus amicus'' (Hagen, 1861) * '' Platycentropus indistinctus'' (Walker, 1852) * '' Platycentropus radiatus'' (Say, 1824) (chocolate and cream sedge) References Further reading * * * Trichoptera genera Articles created by Qbugbot Integripalpia {{trichoptera-stub ...
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Platycentropus Amicus
''Platycentropus'' is a genus of northern caddisflies in the family Limnephilidae. There are at least three described species in ''Platycentropus''. Species These three species belong to the genus ''Platycentropus'': * '' Platycentropus amicus'' (Hagen, 1861) * '' Platycentropus indistinctus'' (Walker, 1852) * '' Platycentropus radiatus'' (Say, 1824) (chocolate and cream sedge) References Further reading * * * Trichoptera genera Articles created by Qbugbot Integripalpia {{trichoptera-stub ...
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Platycentropus Indistinctus
''Platycentropus'' is a genus of northern caddisflies in the family Limnephilidae. There are at least three described species in ''Platycentropus''. Species These three species belong to the genus ''Platycentropus'': * ''Platycentropus amicus ''Platycentropus'' is a genus of northern caddisflies in the family Limnephilidae. There are at least three described species in ''Platycentropus''. Species These three species belong to the genus ''Platycentropus'': * '' Platycentropus amicus' ...'' (Hagen, 1861) * '' Platycentropus indistinctus'' (Walker, 1852) * '' Platycentropus radiatus'' (Say, 1824) (chocolate and cream sedge) References Further reading * * * Trichoptera genera Articles created by Qbugbot Integripalpia {{trichoptera-stub ...
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Platycentropus Radiatus
''Platycentropus radiatus'', the chocolate and cream sedge, is a species of northern caddisfly __NOTOC__ Limnephilidae is a family of Trichoptera, caddisflies with about 100 genera. They belong to the main lineage of case-constructing caddisflies, the Integripalpia or tube-case caddisflies. The Limnephilidae is one of the most species-rich T ... in the family Limnephilidae. It is found in North America. References Integripalpia Articles created by Qbugbot Insects described in 1824 {{trichoptera-stub ...
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Northern Caddisfly
__NOTOC__ Limnephilidae is a family of Trichoptera, caddisflies with about 100 genera. They belong to the main lineage of case-constructing caddisflies, the Integripalpia or tube-case caddisflies. The Limnephilidae is one of the most species-rich Trichoptera families of northern temperate regions, but only a few are known from tropical areas and the Southern Hemisphere. For this reason they are often known as northern caddisflies. Description and ecology The adults are usually brown in colour, often with narrow mottled or patterned forewings and much broader, transparent hindwings. The aquatic animal, aquatic larvae construct portable cases from a wide variety of plant and mineral materials, sometimes even snail shells. Cases of young larvae often looking completely different from those of larger instars. Larvae tend to be eruciform (with a thickset head and thorax), rather slow-moving, and usually feed by browsing algae or scavenging animal remains. They pupate within the larval ca ...
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Limnephilidae
__NOTOC__ Limnephilidae is a family of caddisflies with about 100 genera. They belong to the main lineage of case-constructing caddisflies, the Integripalpia or tube-case caddisflies. The Limnephilidae is one of the most species-rich Trichoptera families of northern temperate regions, but only a few are known from tropical areas and the Southern Hemisphere. For this reason they are often known as northern caddisflies. Description and ecology The adults are usually brown in colour, often with narrow mottled or patterned forewings and much broader, transparent hindwings. The aquatic larvae construct portable cases from a wide variety of plant and mineral materials, sometimes even snail shells. Cases of young larvae often looking completely different from those of larger instars. Larvae tend to be eruciform (with a thickset head and thorax), rather slow-moving, and usually feed by browsing algae or scavenging animal remains. They pupate within the larval case, the pupa sw ...
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Trichoptera Genera
The caddisflies, or order Trichoptera, are a group of insects with aquatic larvae and terrestrial adults. There are approximately 14,500 described species, most of which can be divided into the suborders Integripalpia and Annulipalpia on the basis of the adult mouthparts. Integripalpian larvae construct a portable casing to protect themselves as they move around looking for food, while Annulipalpian larvae make themselves a fixed retreat in which they remain, waiting for food to come to them. The affinities of the small third suborder Spicipalpia are unclear, and molecular analysis suggests it may not be monophyletic. Also called sedge-flies or rail-flies, the adults are small moth-like insects with two pairs of hairy membranous wings. They are closely related to the Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) which have scales on their wings; the two orders together form the superorder Amphiesmenoptera. The aquatic larvae are found in a wide variety of habitats such as streams, ...
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