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 Major Groups | Insecta (insects) | Hemiptera (bugs) | Nepidae
 

Nepidae

Major Group: Insecta
Order:
Hemiptera
Family:
Nepidae

Descriptive Features:

  • body shape varies from flattened and ovoid to cylindrical and parallel sided, typically dull brown
  • head small, horizontal
  • eyes small and contiguous with anterior margin of pronotum
  • ocelli absent
  • antennae 3-segmented, short, inserted ventrally below the eyes, not visible from above
  • rostrum 4-segmented, but 1st segment (appearing 3-segmented)
  • pronotum subquadrate, anterior and posterior margins often emarginate
  • scutellum triangular and large
  • legs generally long and slender
  • forelegs raptorial, fore femora strongly incrassate and grooved ventrally
  • tarsi 1-segmented
  • abdominal sternites divided longitudinally
  • slender respiratory siphon arising from end of abdomen
  • Total length: 10 - 50 mm  (excluding respiratiory siphon which is 5 - 49 mm)
  • Taxonomic Checklist: Genera
    Austronepa
    Cercotmetus
    Goondnomdanepa
    Laccotrephes
    Ranatra

    Distribution: Australia wide. Goondnomdanepa and Austronepa are endemic.

    Sensitivity Rating: SIGNAL grade 3

    Functional Feeding Group: predators

    Ecology: Instream habitat: Nepid bugs occur in a variety of quiet waters, wetlands and ponds, among debris and aquatic vegetation. Laccotrephes and Austronepa species are found in shallow, muddy pools or gentle streams with little vegetation. Ranatra species usually live amongst plant debris or submerged weeds. The endemic Goondnomdanepa species have been collected under rocks in shallow running water and appear to be restricted to lotic waters. 
    Feeding ecology:Nepid bugs are inconspicuous within the vegetation and ambush unsuspecting prey with a quick grasping action of the forelegs. They have excellent sight in large eyes enabling them to easily catch swimming animals such as water boatmen (Hemiptera: Corixidae), tadpoles or small fish which are quickly killed by stabbing with the rostrum.
    Habit: Nepidae species are commonly known as ‘water scorpions” due to the long siphon at the end of their abdomen. They breathe air from an air store concealed beneath the wings that is replenished by way of a breathing tube (the siphon). The bug holds the siphon to the water surface like a snorkel, without actually returning to the surface. Water scorpions are poor swimmers, crawling around the vegetation slowly and only managing a slow paddle through the water if disturbed. Although most species have well developed fore- and hindwings, flight is rarely observed with both hindwing brachyptery and flight muscle degeneration occurring in adult forms. Despite this, nepid bugs, especially Laccotrephes, are quick to colonise new water bodies.
    Life history: Males can produce sounds to attract females. Nepid eggs possess two or more slender respiratory horns at the anterior end. The female lays the eggs into decaying wood or in soft plant stems such that the respiratory horns are exposed to the air. The plastron of the horn then ensures respiration even when an egg is completely submerged. Nymphs go through five moults before reaching the adult form.
     
     
    Information Sources: Andersen & Weir 2004, Cassis & Gross 1995, Lansbury & Lake 2002, Gooderham & Tsyrlin 2002, Davis & Christidis 1997
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