What makes some
species of stoneflies, animals that are cold blooded and rely on favorable environmental
conditions to maintain their metabolic activity, forego the warmth of summer
and emerge under conditions that are marginal at best?
Emerging in
the late winter or early spring exposes winter stoneflies to some very harsh
conditions. Low temperatures mean that they are limited in their ability to
move around; sudden changes in the weather can have life or death consequences;
and there are not many places to hide out on the snowpack. Overall the risks
are very high. Yet they have somehow managed to survive and thrive for hundreds
of thousands of years. Clearly there must be some evolutionary advantage to their
strategy.
Winter
stoneflies do have several tricks that they use to survive the harsh conditions
often encountered at this time of year. Most species are either black or some
shade of dark brown. This allows them to absorb the maximum amount of the suns
energy – both direct sunlight from above, and reflected light off the snow from
below. Even on overcast days there is still enough UV light getting through to
warm their bodies several degrees above the air temperature. At night winter
stoneflies will take refuge in the thin layer of warm air under the snowpack.
And even if their bodies do get chilled a few degrees below zero, the high
concentration of glucose compounds in their body fluids prevent ice crystals
from forming.
But all of
these adaptations will only go so far. A sudden drop in temperature, especially
to levels that are uncharacteristically low for the time of year (as we just
saw), often results in at least some mortality. In addition, their dark
coloration makes them an easy target when moving about on the snow. Add to this
the fact that males lack functional wings and the odds seem to be stacked against them.
Utacapnia trava - adult (wingless) male with teneral female |
So why
emerge in the winter?
Bugs that
emerge in the summer must run the gauntlet of a myriad of predators –
everything from hungry trout and other predatory aquatic bugs, to birds, bats, and…well…everything
else that eats bugs. A common emergence strategy is predator swamping (emerging
en-mass) in hopes that at least a few will survive to carry on the bloodline. Winter
is a more subdued time of year; there are few predators on the prowl and the
trout are often found sulking in their winter lies. This allows winter stonefly
hatches to trickle off over several weeks with minimal fear of becoming dinner
for something else. The prolonged hatch period is added insurance against severe
weather events that may wipe out a portion of the generation.
I am
guessing that the recent cold snap took its toll on any winter stoneflies that
have already emerged. But rest assured, the hatch will resume as soon as things
warm up again.
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