Isostictidae

      Isostictidae
      Scientific classification
      Kingdom: Animalia
      Phylum: Arthropoda
      Class: Insecta
      Order: Odonata
      Suborder: Zygoptera
      Family: Isostictidae
      Genera

      Austrosticta
      Cnemisticta
      Eurysticta
      Isosticta
      Labidiosticta
      Lithosticta
      Neosticta
      Oristicta
      Rhadinosticta
      Selysioneura
      Tanymecosticta
      Titanosticta

      Isostictidae is a small family of medium sized to large damselflies. They're restricted to Australia, New Caledonia and New Guinea. It contains 12 genera and more than 40 species. They resemble species in the threadtail family (Protoneuridae).

      Diagnosis

      • Adult: The adults are small-medium in size with a length of 15-40mm. They have two antenodal crossveins, most postnodal crossveins aligned with crossveins behind them, quadrilateral cell almost rectangular, no supplementary intercalary longitudinal veins, and an anal vein fused with wing margin. Their antennae are 7-segmented.
      • Larva: The larva has a labial mask short,flat, palps narrow, palpal setae present, premental setae variable, median lobe shallowly cleft; caudal gills saccoid to triquetral, strongly nodate.
      ↑Jump back a section

      Ecology

      Adults of Isostictidae have many common names and they are narrow-wings, pinflies, pins, pondsitters, and wiretails.

      • Instream habitat: Isostictid damselfly nymphs occur in streams, rivers, and riverine pools. The adults occur along these habitats. The nymphs are found on submerged vegetation, willow roots, leaf packs and detritus.
      • Feeding ecology: Nymphs and adults are predators.
      • Habits: Nymphs of these damselflies are clingers. Adults like to rest on many different plants.
      • Life history: Some females of some species lay their eggs in dry twigs over lentic freshwater. Other female species may lay their eggs on the bare rocks of waterfalls.
      ↑Jump back a section

      Read in another language

      This page is available in 5 languages

      Last modified on 20 March 2013, at 16:04