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Journal ArticleDOI

Lake flies in Lake Victoria: Their biomass and potential for use in animal feeds

John Okedi
- 01 Feb 1992 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 1, pp 137-144
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TLDR
Adult swarming habits of the lakefly were closely correlated with lunar phases and the adu Its were easily trapped at night using kerosene lamps, making the lake fly ideal as an additive in animal feeds and growth experiments with poultry and aquaculture fish are currently going on to test the suitability of lakefly as an ingredient in animal feed.
Abstract
Insects exhibiting swarming habits in Lake Victoria include mainly the Chironomidae, the Chaoboridae and Povilla adusta (Ephemeroptera). Their early life cycles are spent in the lake as benthos and standard bathymetrie procedures were undertaken to estimate the standing crop biomass of the larvae in Murchison Bay. Povilla was principally a boring invertebrate preferring dried logs (113 g Povilla nymphs per kg of host plant material). Cyperus papyrus carried 5 g C. denudalas 2.5 g and Phragmites mauritanus 1.0 g of Povilla per kg of host plant material. Povilla also occurred in the benthos at 40 g/m2. The Chironomidae and Chaoboridae had a mean standing crop biomass of 80 g/m2 and 3 g/m2 respectively. Their total biomass for the bay was estimated at 16060 metric tonnes for the Chironomidae, 7920 m. t. for Povilla and 660 m. t. for the Chaoborids. Adult swarming habits of the lakefly were closely correlated with lunar phases and the adults were easily trapped at night using kerosene lamps. Biochemical tests of the nutrient value of lakefly showed high levels of protein content (62%), minerals (18%), a low fat content (3.9%) and low moisture content (9%). This makes the lakefly ideal as an additive in animal feeds and growth experiments with poultry and aquaculture fish are currently going on to test the suitability of lakefly as an ingredient in animal feeds.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

African edible insects for food and feed: inventory, diversity, commonalities and contribution to food security

TL;DR: The authors in this paper reviewed entomophagy as practised in Africa within the context of food and nutritional security by providing an inventory of the various species of insects that are consumed on the continent and suggests a research for development (R4D) agenda for sustainable utilisation of insects for food and feed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-modality priming of visual and olfactory selective attention by a spider that feeds indirectly on vertebrate blood.

TL;DR: Investigating how vision and olfaction work together in E. culicivora shows that the spider has an innate inclination to adopt vision-based search images specifically for mosquitoes when primed by mosquito odour and to adopt olf action-basedSearch images specifically when primedBy seeing mosquitoes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumption, indigeneous knowledge and cultural values of the lakefly species within the Lake Victoria region

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the importance of lake flies as a source of food and its role in cultural practices in Nyanza Province within the Lake Victoria region in Kenya.
Journal ArticleDOI

How blood-derived odor influences mate-choice decisions by a mosquito-eating predator

TL;DR: It is shown that, when E. culicivora feeds indirectly on blood, it acquires a diet-related odor that makes it more attractive to the opposite sex, and that the attractive odor from blood dissipates when spiders became less attractive once they were switched to a nonblood diet or subjected to a fast.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Attentive Spider: Search‐Image Use by a Mosquito‐Eating Predator

TL;DR: It is shown that both sexes of E. culicivora can use mate- finding search images and also use prey-finding search images, and that search images were relevant only when the lure to be found was cryptic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The food of non‐cichlid fishes in the lake victoria basin, with remarks on their evolution and adaptation to lacustrine conditions

TL;DR: Ontogenetic changes in feeding behaviour of Mormyrus kannume and Bagrus docmac support the hypothesis that in the lake juveniles of these two species live on rocky shores, with particular reference to breeding habits and food.
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Observations on the biology of chaoborids and chironomids in lake victoria and on the feeding habits of the 'elephant-snout fish' (mormyrus kannume forsk.)

TL;DR: The relationship between the insect larvae and Mormyrus kannume throws some light on the biology of the insects, and features of the insect biology explain some apparent peculiarities of the fish diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lunar Periodicity of Aquatic Insects in Lake Victoria

Philip S. Corbet
- 02 Aug 1958 - 
TL;DR: It is reported that certain aquatic insects in Lake Victoria exhibit periodic emergence, but most swarms of ‘lake-flies’ (unidentified Chironomidae and Chaoborus) have been reported to occur shortly after new moon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lunar Rhythm in the Emergence of an Ephemeropteran

R. Hartland-Rowe
- 01 Oct 1955 - 
TL;DR: Evidence has been obtained which suggests that Povilla adusta Navas, a mayfly widely distributed in Central and Southern Africa, shows such a rhythm of emergence in Uganda.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substrate relations of the African wood‐burrowing mayfly Povilla adusta Navás (Ephemeroptera, Polymitarcyidae)

TL;DR: Differences in the abundance of periphyton on the various surfaces may account for some of the patterns of colonization of an artificial substrate by nymphs of the wood‐burrowing mayfly Povilla adusta in a natural West‐African lake.
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