Entomologist Kevin Moulton, PhD University of Tennessee with Specimen of New Fly Species |
Moulton now leads a research team of PhD candidates based at the University of Tennessee who scour the Southeast for the very creatures most people try to avoid. He's known as a specialist in studying Diptera, with dozens of published research works and a knack for identifying the tiniest creatures that no one has ever cataloged. Most recently, the team discovered another new species of order Diptera and family Blephariceridae, a specific type of net-winged midge, in a stream in North Georgia. It's so new to science that it hasn't even been named. I asked Moulton why the rest of us should care about these things that his colleagues in entomology get so enthused about.
"Every insect or every organism really has a role to play ecologically," explained Moulton, "The net-winged midges are food for other insects that are food for fishes and other things. So it's a chain. They call it a food web, not a food chain, because there are more interconnections than what a chain would indicate, everything's interrelated. You never know what the repercussions would be if you lose a part of that web."
Back in the laboratory, researchers break down the details to the very DNA of these humble, two-winged creatures. Gene sequencing creates family trees that show relationships between them. In the case of this newest net-winged midge, adults survive for approximately two to four weeks in the spring. The larval and pupal stages are still undiscovered, but should be present by March.
Tomorrow: what flies can tell us about the world around us...
This is a fascinating post. I understand that all lifer forms are important for the food but, but personally I always found winged midge's to be creepy looking.
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