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| Immature Stages
  of Hydrophilidae  Detailed information on immature stages of Hydrophilidae is being
  acquired.  However, Clausen (1940)
  noted that larvae of Hydrophilidae are voracious predators on a variety of
  insects and other aquatic animals; while the adults are scavengers on
  decaying plant and animal matter (Legner et al. 1980).   Several species have been introduced for
  biological control with no reported success.   Aquatic hydrophilids are most often found in ponds, especially
  those having extensive vegetative growth, although they also may be found
  along streams.  Adult beetles are
  principally scavengers, consuming decaying animal matter and also living on
  dead plant tissue.  Many species feed
  mostly on algae and other lower forms of plant life.  Although most larvae are predaceous, there
  are some exceptions.  Predaceous forms
  feed on various worms, snails, insect larvae and pupae, Entomostraca, small
  fish, crayfish and tadpoles.  They may
  actually swallow bits of solid matter, but seem to prefer body fluids of
  their prey.   Oviposition behavior is distinctive because of the silken case
  within which the eggs of many species are contained.  Several more primitive subfamilies lay
  their eggs singly, with little or no covering.  In a few genera, the cases are attached to the body of the
  parent by silken strands, while in others they are enclosed in a folded leaf,
  placed on foliage underneath the water, or float free on the surface (Clausen
  1940/62).  The larvae of many aquatic
  species are unable to swim, but rather move about by crawling along the
  bottom or on vegetation, and may be found only partially submerged.  Larvae of most species construct their
  pupal cases out of the water, near the water line in mud, under various
  objects, or on plants above ground.  Enochrus is reported to form
  its case from floating strands of Spirogyra.       References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional references may be
  found at: MELVYL Library ]   |