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  2. Mayfly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayfly

    Fishing flies from Charles and Richard Bowlker's Art of Angling (1854) 2. "Blue Dun" mayfly. 3. "March Brown" mayfly. Mayflies are the primary source of models for artificial flies, hooks tied with coloured materials such as threads and feathers, used in fly fishing. [4] These are based on different life-cycle stages of mayflies.

  3. Chauliodinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chauliodinae

    Fishflies are members of the subfamily Chauliodinae, belonging to the megalopteran family Corydalidae. [1] They are most easily distinguished from their closest relatives, dobsonflies, by the jaws (mandibles) and antennae.

  4. Artificial fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_fly

    An artificial fly or fly lure is a type of fishing lure, usually used in the sport of fly fishing (although they may also be used in other forms of angling). In general, artificial flies are an imitation of aquatic insects that are natural food of the target fish species the fly fishers try to catch.

  5. Blue-winged Olive flies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue-Winged_Olive_flies

    Blue-winged Olive flies is a collective term used by anglers in fly fishing to identify a broad array of mayflies having olive, olive-brown bodies and bluish wings in their adult form. Sometimes referred to as BWO , a wide array of artificial flies are tied to imitate adult, nymphal and emerging stages of the aquatic insect.

  6. Salmon fly patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmon_fly_patterns

    Salmon flies are common in high gradient, freestone rivers and streams from Western Canada throughout the Western U.S. to Mexico in the Rocky Mountains and coastal mountain ranges. Nymphs live for three to five years before adult emergence which typically occurs in late Spring or early summer. [ 1 ]

  7. Terrestrial flies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_flies

    In the early centuries of fly fishing, fly anglers certainly attempted to replicate just about any type of live bait used for fishing. Some of these flies were undoubtedly replicating terrestrial insects. The Palmer Worm of the 17th century was a heavily hackled fly that resembled a common fuzzy caterpillar, yet as Andrew Herd in The Fly-Two ...