Diving beetles, back-swimmers, and water boatmen all inhabit aquatic environments, but their diets differ. Diving beetles are primarily predators that feed on other aquatic organisms, including insects and small fish. Back-swimmers also consume small prey but are known for their unique ability to swim upside down and can eat other insects on the water's surface. Water boatmen, on the other hand, primarily feed on algae and plant matter, although they may occasionally consume small invertebrates.
backswimmer
they are consumed by great diving beetles and water mites plus they consume algae and tadpoles
A Great Diving beetle will first collect air bubbles in their wings cases which allows them to breath while they are under water. The shape of their body and how they move their wings under water is what allows them to move quickly.
1) predaceous diving beetle 2) water bug
Small fish, the larvae of the Diving Beetle, and Tadpoles.
Small fish, the larvae of the Diving Beetle, and Tadpoles.
in water, sometimes in land
the water boatman scientific name is Arctocorixa interrupta
a water boatman is not endagered. Their are at least 1000000000000000000000
The scientific name for a water boatman is a Corixa.
no, the water boatman lives on top of the water, the pollution would freeze the water, therefore the water boatman wouldn't survive.
Great Diving Beetle