Molecular Biology and Genetics

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Locations of barcode samples

Collection Sites: world map showing specimen collection locations for Corydalidae
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Statistics of barcoding coverage

Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
                                                             
Specimen Records:1,302
Specimens with Sequences:846
Specimens with Barcodes:812
Public Records:360
Species:105
Species With Barcodes:99
  
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Barcode data

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Wikipedia

Corydalidae

Corydalidae!<-- This template has to be "warmed up" before it can be used, for some reason -->

The family Corydalidae contains the megalopterous insects known as dobsonflies and fishflies. Making up about one dozen genera[1], they occur primarily throughout the Northern Hemisphere, both temperate and tropical, and South America.

They are sizeable Megaloptera, with a body usually larger than 25 mm (1 inch). They often have long filamentous antennae, though in male fishflies they are characteristically feathered. Ocelli are present; the fourth tarsal segment is cylinder-shaped. The four large wings are translucent, smoky grey, or mixed, and the anterior pair is slightly longer than the posterior one.

The eastern dobsonfly, Corydalus cornutus, is the most well-known North American species among the dobsonflies. These genera have distinctive elongated mandibles in males and form the subfamily Corydalinae. The genera in which the males have normal mandibles, called fishflies, form the subfamily Chauliodinae. The summer fishfly, Chauliodes pectinicornis, is perhaps the best-known of these in North America; its immense mating swarms in the Upper Mississippi River region fill the air on a few summer nights each year much like mayflies in certain regions of Europe, leaving millions of carcasses to be cleaned up the next day.

The larvae are aquatic, active, armed with strong sharp mandibles, and breathe by means of abdominal branchial filaments. When full sized — which can take several years — they leave the water and spend a quiescent pupal stage on the land, in chambers dug under stones or logs, before metamorphosis into the sexually mature insect.

Footnotes

  1. ^ See references in Haaramo (2008)

References


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