How to translate text using browser tools
20 December 2022 Museum records of California Trichoptera: potentially useful information to provide larval-adult associations for improving water quality surveys
Vincent H. Resh, Patina K. Mendez
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Examination of museum records indicate that 358 species of Trichoptera belonging to 83 genera and 20 families have been collected in California. The families Limnephilidae and Rhyacophilidae exhibited the greatest richness. Museums holding species records from California are listed, which enables localities to be obtained digitally or through museum contacts. Far more digital records for Trichoptera are available from statewide, water-quality monitoring programs than from museums, but identifications are typically made at the generic level where metrics describing pollution tolerance are less valuable than when at the species level. Increased numbers of larval-adult associations may result when researchers can use these museum records to involve volunteer community scientists in making targeted collections to provide specimens for rearing, metamorphotypes, or molecular analysis. This approach could enhance both water quality monitoring and community ecology studies of Trichoptera and other aquatic insects.

Vincent H. Resh and Patina K. Mendez "Museum records of California Trichoptera: potentially useful information to provide larval-adult associations for improving water quality surveys," The Pan-Pacific Entomologist 98(4), 321-339, (20 December 2022). https://doi.org/10.3956/2022-98.4.321
Received: 24 September 2022; Accepted: 3 November 2022; Published: 20 December 2022
KEYWORDS
bioassessment
biomonitoring
caddisflies
community science
faunal studies
larval-adult associations
monitoring water quality
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top