Dawid Loubser
Member
I am no etymologist, so I have no idea what species this is (but surely, it is a species of Mayfly?). This weekend, I had the opportunity to witness their emergence from the water, their mating swarm, and their quick demise. These photographs were taken in Rivonia, Johannesburg (South Africa).
For kilometers, a strange smoky wispiness indicated the presence of large swarms of these insects.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-1-65745205
Upon close inspection, the crazy swarm seems to flow with a gentle (though swift), controlled motion, as countless millions of insects each perform a gentle mating flight.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-2-65745253
This species has three unusually long 'tails' at the back, and each insect flies with a quite extraordinary posture, forming a perfect cross. After many, many tries, this is the best I could manage to isolate one of them in flight, which illustrates this extraordinary posture.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-3-65745378
Mayflies live an adult life of between 30 minutes and one day (no longer), and after this short life has been spent performing once aerial dance in a swarm, they die and float to oblivion.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-4-65745479
Apparently, they do this in such numbers that they cause massive problems in e.g. the filtration systems of nuclear reactors and the like, and a bit higher up here in Africa, on this one day when they emerge in countless billions from some of Africa's large lakes (such as Lake Malawi - a.k.a. Lake Nyasa) they are gathered by the locals by the tonne, and are fried into fly cakes (according to a BBC / David Attenborough documentary I saw years ago).
Technical notes
All taken with Canon EOS 1D MkIIN and EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens. The flight shots were taken into the sun to provide a more interesting rendering (and isolate from a darker, uninteresting background). I tried shooting into the swarm with illumination from a ring flash (for complete subject isolation), but in this case, natural sun backlight always offered a more interesting picture in my opinion.
My technique for in-flight closeups were quite simple:I pre-focused manually, stepped into the swarm, and took a shot whenever it appeared as if several were in focus. The most tricky was when I wanted to get a single one into focus - I shot with a big aperture, and took many many tries (would never do this with film!).
I Just wanted to share a little insight into the outwardly apparently boring lives of these drab little insects that emerge once a year.
For kilometers, a strange smoky wispiness indicated the presence of large swarms of these insects.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-1-65745205
Upon close inspection, the crazy swarm seems to flow with a gentle (though swift), controlled motion, as countless millions of insects each perform a gentle mating flight.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-2-65745253
This species has three unusually long 'tails' at the back, and each insect flies with a quite extraordinary posture, forming a perfect cross. After many, many tries, this is the best I could manage to isolate one of them in flight, which illustrates this extraordinary posture.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-3-65745378
Mayflies live an adult life of between 30 minutes and one day (no longer), and after this short life has been spent performing once aerial dance in a swarm, they die and float to oblivion.

http://philosomatographer.deviantart.com/art/Mayflies-part-4-65745479
Apparently, they do this in such numbers that they cause massive problems in e.g. the filtration systems of nuclear reactors and the like, and a bit higher up here in Africa, on this one day when they emerge in countless billions from some of Africa's large lakes (such as Lake Malawi - a.k.a. Lake Nyasa) they are gathered by the locals by the tonne, and are fried into fly cakes (according to a BBC / David Attenborough documentary I saw years ago).
Technical notes
All taken with Canon EOS 1D MkIIN and EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens. The flight shots were taken into the sun to provide a more interesting rendering (and isolate from a darker, uninteresting background). I tried shooting into the swarm with illumination from a ring flash (for complete subject isolation), but in this case, natural sun backlight always offered a more interesting picture in my opinion.
My technique for in-flight closeups were quite simple:I pre-focused manually, stepped into the swarm, and took a shot whenever it appeared as if several were in focus. The most tricky was when I wanted to get a single one into focus - I shot with a big aperture, and took many many tries (would never do this with film!).
I Just wanted to share a little insight into the outwardly apparently boring lives of these drab little insects that emerge once a year.