Читать книгу Extreme Insects - Richard Jones - Страница 28
Most streamlined insect
ОглавлениеNAME | water pennies in the family Psephenidae |
LOCATION | worldwide |
ATTRIBUTE | shaped to withstand rushing torrents |
Despite rolling boulders and white water, life continues beneath the surface of fast-flowing rivers. There, attached to the stones in the water, live water pennies. So named because they are roughly the size of a one-cent coin (a penny), these creatures are the larvae of beetles. The adult beetles are terrestrial, but their larvae are wholly aquatic.
A water penny is multi-segmented, with each segment flattened into a flange that surrounds its body, hiding head, legs and gills beneath a smooth carapace. It clings tight to rocks and stones using its clawed feet. If it cannot get a purchase, then even slow-moving water can wash it away. The larvae spend most of the time under stones or pressed into small cracks in the rocks, feeding on microscopic algae. But they must leave the water to pupate, and at such times they are exposed to the force of the water.
In rapidly moving water, there is a boundary layer of calmer water at the bottom, slowed by friction with the river bed. Small and flattened, water pennies can sit within this layer, but they cannot afford to be complacent. As well as clinging on tight with their feet, they use hydrodynamics to hold fast. By pumping water out through the gaps between their segments and at the tail end of the body, they can reduce turbulence to creep slowly through the force of the flow.