Abstract |
Three species of burrowing mayflies (Hexagenia bilineata, Hexagenia limbata, and Pentagenia vittigera) are sufficiently abundant to cause nuisance problems along portions of the Mississippi River. Mayfly distribution, as determined by collections made by ship captains and other cooperators over a 13-year period, has proven to be an excellent index of general water quality on a river which is so large that it cannot be monitored effectively or economically by standard methods. Pollutants have severely reduced the numbers of all three species for 30 miles below Minneapolis, Minnesota, and for over 300 miles below St. Louis, Missouri. Impoundment and enrichment of the Upper Mississippi River has temporarily increased the carrying capacity of the river for H. bilineata which now dominates areas formerly dominated by H. limbata. Methods have been developed to rear large numbers of Hexagenia nymphs in the laboratory. Bioassay tests utilizing artificial, burrow-containing substrates reveal that H. bilineata nymphs can survive anaerobic conditions for as long as 11 hours. (Author) |