Mayflies Handbook is a clear, engaging guide to one of the most important--and most misunderstood--insect groups in freshwater ecosystems. Mayflies can look fragile and fleeting as adults, but their real story happens underwater: months (sometimes years) spent as nymphs in streams, rivers, and lakes, shaping food webs and quietly reflecting the health of the water they live in.
This handbook explains mayflies in a way that feels real and useful. You'll learn the full life cycle, the behaviors that help nymphs survive in moving water, and why mayfly "hatches" can transform entire landscapes in a single evening. Along the way, you'll see why scientists, naturalists, and anglers pay attention to mayflies: they are living links between water quality, habitat structure, and the animals that depend on them.
Inside you'll discover:
Written for beginners, students, nature lovers, and anyone curious about rivers and lakes, Mayflies Handbook turns a short-lived insect into a big, satisfying ecological story--one that helps you read freshwater habitats with sharper eyes.
If you want to understand mayflies as more than a "bug hatch"--as essential biology that holds freshwater ecosystems together--Mayflies Handbook is your practical, fascinating guide.