Abstract
We monitored aquatic invertebrate communities in the Ogeechee River (four years) and Carolina bay wetlands (five years) in Georgia, USA. Typically rare, Sisyridae (Neuroptera) larvae were relatively common in both habitats (4–6% sample occurrence). However, different species occurred in each, Climacia areolaris (Hagen, 1861) in the river and Sisyra vicaria (Walker, 1853) in the wetlands. In the river, first instar C. areolaris larvae occurred throughout the summer, consistent with multivoltinism; first instars were also abundant in February. In the wetlands, only single annual cohorts of S. vicaria were detected. The Ogeechee River sampling occurred in the 1980s and 2010s, and late instar C. areolaris were more common in the 2010s, suggesting a response to environmental change. Digitised museum data of adult specimens corroborated most of the phenology patterns observed for larvae, as well as the recent increase in abundance for C. areolaris.
Acknowledgements
We thank Arthur Benke for donating the 1980s Ogeechee River samples to the Georgia Museum of Natural History. We thank the natural history museums and iNaturalist contributors who provided the digitised specimen data used in this study (acknowledged individually in the GBIF reports). Constructive comments from two anonymous referees improved this paper. Land acknowledgement: The areas used for our study is the ancestral home of the Mvskoke (Muskogee/Creek) and the Yamassee nations (Temprano Citation2021).
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.