Swimming Mayfly Nymphs (also called naiads) fall under the order Ephemeroptera and the family Baetidae or Leptophlebidae.
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Mayfly largely feed on algae, fungi and decaying plant materials and then digest what they can and pass out waste
most types of mayfly nymphs are omnivorous but some types can be either herbivores or carnivores as well
Spiny crawler is what the Hendrickson mayfly (Ephemerella subvaria) nymph is called.Specifically, the nymph is the immature developmental stage of the mayfly. It is what hatches out of the eggs laid by the female after mating with the male Hendrickson mayfly. It looks like a developing, smaller version of the mature Hendrickson mayfly.
One tail split into 3 sections
We usually know nothing about nymphs' families. They just exist.
Larvae means its wingless, or its the feeding stage for when an insect has completed metamorphisis, an animal in analogous immature form, the young of any invertabrate
Nymphs. Wood nymphs are dryads/ napaeae; tree nymphs are hamadryads; water, stream and fountain nymphs are naiads; sea nymphs are nereids; ocean nymphs are oceanids; and mountain nymphs are oreads.
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The Greek God of swimming is Aka May- Pata
The Nymphs ended in 1992.