Mayfly Family Ephemerellidae (Hendricksons, Sulphurs, PMDs, BWOs)
Taxonomic Navigation -?-
Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
» Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods)
» Class Insecta (Insects)
» Order Ephemeroptera (Mayflies)
» Family Ephemerellidae (Hendricksons, Sulphurs, PMDs, BWOs)
| Genus in Ephemerellidae | ||
| Attenella | 5 | 28 |
| Caudatella | 0 | 0 |
| Dannella | 0 | 0 |
| DrunellaBlue-Winged Olives | 8 | 60 |
| EphemerellaHendricksons, Sulphurs, PMDs | 123 | 563 |
| EurylophellaChocolate Duns | 14 | 57 |
| Serratella | 1 | 6 |
| Timpanoga | 0 | 0 |
2 genera aren't included.
Common Name
| Match | Common Name |
| Hendricksons, Sulphurs, PMDs, BWOs |
This is page 8 of specimens of Ephemerellidae. Visit the main Ephemerellidae page for:
- The behavior and habitat of Ephemerellidae.
- 37 underwater pictures of Ephemerellidae.
- 9 streamside pictures of Ephemerellidae.
165 Mayfly Specimens in the Family Ephemerellidae:
Ephemerella invaria (Sulphur) Mayfly Spinner
View 4 PicturesHere's the first sulphur dun I found in the 2004 season.
View 4 PicturesHere's the first sulphur dun I found in the 2004 season.Region: Upper Midwest
Collected May 18, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella invaria (Sulphur) Mayfly Dun
View 3 Pictures
View 3 PicturesRegion: Upper Midwest
Collected May 28, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella subvaria (Hendrickson) Mayfly Nymph
View 4 PicturesHere's one of the darkest E. subvaria nymphs I've seen.
View 4 PicturesHere's one of the darkest E. subvaria nymphs I've seen.Region: Upper Midwest
Collected Feb 7, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Eurylophella (Chocolate Duns) Mayfly Nymph
View 3 Pictures
View 3 PicturesRegion: Northeast
Collected Mar 13, 2005
Added Apr 5, 2006
Ephemerella invaria (Sulphur) Mayfly Dun
View 4 Pictures
View 4 PicturesRegion: Upper Midwest
Collected May 26, 2005
Added May 16, 2006
Ephemerella (Hendricksons, Sulphurs, PMDs) Mayfly Nymph
View 6 PicturesThis pretty Ephemerella nymph has really weird markings. It has one band on the tibiae (Tibia: A middle segments in the leg of an insect, located between the femur and the tarsus.) and a thin but distinct dorsal (Dorsal: Top.) stripe faded in the center which looks very different from the stripes on Ephemerella needhami and Ephemerella aurivillii. It definitely has the fan tail characteristic of the Ephemerella genus.
View 6 PicturesThis pretty Ephemerella nymph has really weird markings. It has one band on the tibiae (Tibia: A middle segments in the leg of an insect, located between the femur and the tarsus.) and a thin but distinct dorsal (Dorsal: Top.) stripe faded in the center which looks very different from the stripes on Ephemerella needhami and Ephemerella aurivillii. It definitely has the fan tail characteristic of the Ephemerella genus.Region: Upper Midwest
Collected Feb 7, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella subvaria (Hendrickson) Mayfly Nymph
View 3 PicturesThis is one of the nymphs I collected doing something very, very strange on March 17th 2004. In the middle of the day, around 2 pm, in the water right around my feet I watched lots of Ephemerella nymphs clumsily swimming up all the way to the surface and then just kind of drifting and wiggling around in the water column. None hatched. They seemed to do it more intensely when the sun was out. It wasn't the time of day for the normal invertebrate drift phenomenon, and as far as I know invertebrate drift doesn't involve this kind of clear effort to swim all the way to the surface. I didn't need a net to catch them, I just reached down into the water and grabbed them with my fingers just below the surface.
The prominent abdominal tubercles (
Tubercle: Various peculiar little bumps or projections on an insect. Their character is important for the identification of many kinds of insects, such as the nymphs of Ephemerellidae mayflies.) aren't quite black, though, and the general color is a dark brown, though I saw nymphs with all Hendrickson color stages behaving strangely.
View 3 PicturesThis is one of the nymphs I collected doing something very, very strange on March 17th 2004. In the middle of the day, around 2 pm, in the water right around my feet I watched lots of Ephemerella nymphs clumsily swimming up all the way to the surface and then just kind of drifting and wiggling around in the water column. None hatched. They seemed to do it more intensely when the sun was out. It wasn't the time of day for the normal invertebrate drift phenomenon, and as far as I know invertebrate drift doesn't involve this kind of clear effort to swim all the way to the surface. I didn't need a net to catch them, I just reached down into the water and grabbed them with my fingers just below the surface.The prominent abdominal tubercles (

A few (not all) of the abdominal tubercles on this Ephemerella needhami nymph are circled. They are especially large in this species.
Region: Upper Midwest
Collected Mar 17, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella subvaria (Hendrickson) Mayfly Nymph
View 4 Pictures
View 4 PicturesRegion: Upper Midwest
Collected Jan 13, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella subvaria (Hendrickson) Mayfly Dun
View 3 Pictures
View 3 PicturesRegion: Upper Midwest
Collected Apr 24, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006
Ephemerella invaria (Sulphur) Mayfly Spinner
View 3 PicturesI caught this one as a dun and he molted into a spinner in my room.
View 3 PicturesI caught this one as a dun and he molted into a spinner in my room.Region: Upper Midwest
Collected May 27, 2004
Added Jan 25, 2006

