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Photo of SEM of a black fly larval nymph (Simulium hippovorum), mag. 12x (at 24 x 36 mm). Larvae of the black fly, a bloodsucking pest, live in flowing water. The ribbon of silk emerging from a duct below its mouth serves as a mooring line to attach the filter-feeding larva to aquatic vegetation or rocks. Its proleg (larval leg) can pull or hold threads of silk.
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SEM of a black fly larval nymph (Simulium hippovorum), mag. 12x (at 24 x 36 mm). Larvae of the black fly, a bloodsucking pest, live in flowing water. The ribbon of silk emerging from a duct below its mouth serves as a mooring line to attach the filter-feeding larva to aquatic vegetation or rocks. Its proleg (larval leg) can pull or hold threads of silk.

Copyright © Dennis Kunkel Microscopy, Inc. / Phototake -- All rights reserved.

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