Limnephilidae
Family of caddisflies
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Limnephilidae is a family of caddisflies with about 100 genera and almost 900 described species.[1] They belong to the main lineage of case-constructing caddisflies, the Integripalpia or tube-case caddisflies.[2] The Limnephilidae is one of the most species-rich Trichoptera families of northern temperate regions, but only a few are known from tropical areas and the Southern Hemisphere.[2] For this reason they are often known as northern caddisflies.[3]
| Limnephilidae | |
|---|---|
| Glyphopsyche sequatchie | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Trichoptera |
| Superfamily: | Limnephiloidea |
| Family: | Limnephilidae Kolenati, 1848 |
| Subfamilies | |
|
Dicosmoecinae | |
Description and ecology
The adults are usually brown in colour, often with narrow mottled or patterned forewings and much broader, transparent hindwings.[4] The aquatic larvae construct portable cases from a wide variety of plant and mineral materials, sometimes even snail shells.[5] Cases of young larvae often look completely different from those of larger instars.[5] The general trend in the family is that larvae in cool running waters use mineral material for their cases, while those in warmer lentic habitats use plant material.[3] Larvae tend to be eruciform (with a thickset head and thorax), rather slow-moving, and usually feed by browsing algae or scavenging animal remains.[4][3] They pupate within the larval case, the pupa swimming to the surface before flying away as an adult.[4] For most species the life cycle is completed within one year.[4]
This is arguably the most ecologically diverse caddisfly family, as larvae occupy the full range of freshwater habitats, including lakes, streams, marshes, and temporary pools.[3] The family includes one extraordinary aberrant genus, Enoicyla, whose larvae are terrestrial, living among moss and leaf litter on the woodland floor.[6] In Britain, Enoicyla pusilla is found chiefly in and around Wyre Forest, Worcestershire and neighbouring counties.[6] The females of Enoicyla have only vestigial wings and are flightless.[6]
- Larval case of Anabolia nervosa
- Larval case of Limnephilus flavicornis
- Larval case of Limnephilus stigma
- Larval case of Glyphotaelius pellucidus
Systematics

The monophyly of Limnephilidae is supported by multiple independent genes, including nuclear rRNA and mitochondrial COI, as well as combined molecular and morphological data.[7][2]
The Limnephilidae are divided among the four subfamilies listed here (with some notable genera also given). A few genera are not presently assignable to subfamily.[2]
- Dicosmoecinae
- Drusinae
- Drusus
- Limnephilinae
- Pseudostenophylacinae
- Aplatyphylax
- Astenophylina
- Astratodina
- Phylostenax
- Pseudostenophylax
- Incertae sedis
- Allomyia
- Manophylax
- Moselyana
- Pedomoecus