Abstract: | The adult habits and emergence of Dolania americana (Ephemeroptera: Behningiidae) were studied at the Blackwater River in Northwestern Florida. The adult life is crepuscular, beginning about 1½ hrs before sunrise with emergence of male subimagos. Males molt to imagos, female subimagos emerge, males and females mate, and females begin to oviposit in a fairly precise time sequence over the following hour. Only a few adults survive past sunrise. Females never molt to imagos and are polymorphic. Emergence is seasonal and begins between the end of April and the middle of May, depending on climatic conditions. Emergence is photoperiodically entrained. Water temperature is a phase setter and light intensity acts as a synchronizer. |