Diversity and distribution of polyphagan water beetles (Coleoptera) in the Lake St Lucia system, South Africa

Abstract Water beetles belonging to the suborder Polyphaga vary greatly in larval and adult ecologies, and fulfil important functional roles in shallow-water ecosystems by processing plant material, scavenging and through predation. This study investigates the species richness and composition of aquatic polyphagan assemblages in and around the St Lucia estuarine lake (South Africa), within the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. A total of 32 sites were sampled over three consecutive collection trips between 2013 and 2015. The sites encompassed a broad range of aquatic habitats, being representative of the variety of freshwater and estuarine environments present on the St Lucia coastal plain. Thirty-seven polyphagan taxa were recorded during the dedicated surveys of this study, in addition to seven species-level records from historical collections. Most beetles recorded are relatively widespread Afrotropical species and only three are endemic to South Africa. Samples were dominated by members of the Hydrophilidae (27 taxa), one of which was new to science (Hydrobiomorpha perissinottoi Bilton, 2016). Despite the fauna being dominated by relatively widespread taxa, five represent new records for South Africa, highlighting the poor state of knowledge on water beetle distribution patterns in the region. Wetlands within the dense woodland characterising the False Bay region of St Lucia supported a distinct assemblage of polyphagan beetles, whilst sites occurring on the Eastern and Western Shores of Lake St Lucia were very similar in their beetle composition. In line with the Afrotropical region as a whole, the aquatic Polyphaga of St Lucia appear to be less diverse than the Hydradephaga, for which 68 species were recorded during the same period. However, the results of the present study, in conjunction with those for Hydradephaga, show that the iSimangaliso Wetland Park contains a high beetle diversity. The ongoing and future ecological protection of not only the estuarine lake itself, but also surrounding freshwater wetlands, is imperative and should be taken into consideration during future management planning for the park.


Introduction
A recent survey of the Hydradephaga of the Lake St Lucia system, located within the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, has shown that this is a hot-spot of aquatic beetle diversity, with 68 species recorded in total, including several new records for the region . This paper details the polyphagan water beetles found during the course of the same surveys.
The suborder Polyphaga includes the vast majority of beetles, with an estimated 320 000 species currently described in 151 families (Beutel and Leschen 2005). On a global scale, the diversity of Polyphaga that inhabit truly aquatic environments is slightly above that of the Hydradephaga, although in the Afrotropical region more Adephaga have been described to date (Jäch and Balke 2008). Worldwide, thirteen families of Polyphaga have predominantly aquatic representatives, with the Hydrophilidae, Hydraenidae, Scirtidae and Elmidae comprising the bulk of them (Jäch and Balke 2008). Other predominant aquatic families occurring in southern Africa within the suborder are Helophoridae (largely confined to the Palearctic Region, with only two species of Helophorus Fabricius, 1775, known from Africa), Epimetopidae (represented in Africa by only one genus, Eupotemus Ji & Jach, 1998), Heteroceridae (23 known southern African species), Hydrochidae (with eleven species of Hydrochus Leach, 1817, represented in southern Africa), Ptilodactylidae (in a state of taxonomic disarray, but with at least two genera in southern Africa), Spercheidae (monogeneric family with five species recognized in southern Africa), Dryopidae (represented in southern Africa by three genera and eight species); and Psephenidae (with three monospecific genera currently recognized in southern Africa) (Stals and de Moor 2007). Other polyphagans that have affinity for aquatic habitats but are not regarded as true water beetles are now referred to as "paraquatic" (sensu Jäch and Balke 2008). These include the "shore beetles", "facultative water beetles" and "parasitic water beetles" (sensu Jäch 1998).
Like the hydradephagans, polyphagans are also found in all types of aquatic habitats and although they do not spread into the open ocean, some species are able to tolerate hypersaline conditions as high as 250‰, especially hydraenids in the genus Ochthebius Leach, 1815(Perkins 1980, Gerdes et al. 1985, Abellán et al. 2007). Most species of aquatic Polyphaga are either scavengers or phytophages, but some of the larger species are predatory, particularly in the Hydrophiloidea, which also frequently have aquatic larvae, some of which may be semi-terrestrial (Beutel and Leschen 2005). Thus they play key roles in aquatic ecosystems and may significantly impact the trophic structure and functioning of wetland ecosystems, such as Lake St Lucia and its associated wetlands in northern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
The St Lucia lake system is part of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, South Africa's first UNESCO World Heritage Site and a RAMSAR Wetland of International Importance (Perissinotto et al. 2013). The broad region of the park has historically experienced drastic shifts in climatic conditions, with droughts and floods alternating at semi-decadal cycles (Perissinotto et al. 2013). The last wet phase was recorded in the park from 2011 to 2014, resulting in repeated flood events, with large amounts of freshwater flowing into the system, changing the prevailing salinity state from hypersaline to oligo-or polyhaline. This led to the penetration of numerous brackish and freshwater species into the estuarine lake from adjacent rivers and wetlands. Prominent among these were aquatic insects, especially beetles, thereby providing an opportunity and necessity to renew efforts towards the investigation of the diversity and dynamics of this invertebrate component within the system. Here we report the findings of a census on the aquatic Polyphaga undertaken within Lake St Lucia and its associated wetlands during the period July 2013-February 2015. The results of this have been combined with historical records to provide a baseline for future identification and monitoring of beetle biodiversity patterns in response to climatic and anthropogenic changes.

Materials and methods
The sampling design and protocol for this study follow those described by Perissinotto et al. (2016), who provide a detailed description of study sites and sampling techniques. A summary of their account is provided here.

Study area
Lake St Lucia (27°52'0"S to 28°24'0"S and 32°21'0"E to 32°34'0"E) is located in the north-eastern corner of South Africa in the KwaZulu-Natal province and is a large (~ 300 to 350 km 2 ) estuarine lake system comprising three interconnected shallow lakes (South Lake, North Lake and False Bay) that are joined to the Indian Ocean via a 21 km channel known as the Narrows (Fig. 1). Aquatic beetle samples were collected from a variety of freshwater habitats on the coastal plain surrounding the main expanse of Lake St Lucia, and from the vegetated margins of the estuarine lake body itself. Three collection trips were undertaken: November 2013 (19 th -30 th ); July 2014 (23 rd -24 th ); and January-February 2015 (31 st January -6 th February). In total, 32 sites were sampled over the course of the three collection trips, encompassing a diverse array of habitats (Fig. 1).
Six waterbody types were sampled (following the classification of Ollis et al. 2015): depression wetlands (both isolated and non-isolated, n = 16); valley bottom wetlands (both channelled and un-channelled, n = 8); rivers (both in-channel and riparian habitats, n = 4); a wetland flat; a seepage wetland; and the estuarine lake body itself. Most  Table 1. of these waterbodies were extensively vegetated and some of the smaller depression and valley bottom wetlands were temporary. The locations sampled, their habitat classification and dates of sampling are summarised in Table 1. Table 1. Geographic position and classification of the waterbodies sampled during this study. Sampling took place during the three collecting trips to Lake St Lucia during November 2013, July 2014 and January/February 2015. Classification (wetland type) follows the hydrogeomorphic (HGM) approach of Ollis et al. (2015). WS -Western Shores; ES -Eastern Shores; FB -False Bay.

Field sampling protocol
Beetle collection efforts primarily involved the use of a long-handled square-framed sweep net (30 cm mouth and 1 mm mesh), following a sweep protocol similar to that of Bilton et al. (2006) and Bird et al. (2013). Sampling effort was concentrated in submerged vegetation and at the shore margins. A semi-quantitative approach was incorporated, whereby approximately 20 sweeps from the water surface to bottom substrate and back to the surface were performed at each waterbody. Visual searches for beetles at the shore margin and light trapping were also conducted to complement the array of taxa collected with the sweep net. The light trap consisted of a 4×3 m white sheet that was hung vertically below a fluorescent mercury vapour lamp (Radiant 250 W) and was deployed on all three survey trips at False Bay, adjacent to the lake shore (site 31, Table 1), during the evening (20:00-05:00 hrs). Aquatic coleopteran specimens were retrieved from the light sheet by hand. All beetle specimens collected during the November 2013 and July 2014 surveys were killed using ethyl acetate vapour and preserved in 5% formalin solution. Specimens collected during January-February 2015 were killed in the same way and preserved in 70% ethanol. A range of in situ physico-chemical parameters were measured at each site. Salinity, temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen and turbidity were recorded using a YSI 6600-V2 multi-system probe. Due to technical problems, physico-chemical measurements were not taken during November 2013.

Historical data and other collections
Aquatic Polyphaga collections housed in the major South African museums, namely the Iziko South African Museum (ISAM, Cape Town), the Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (DNMNH, Pretoria; formerly the Transvaal Museum) and the South African National Collection of Insects (SANC, Pretoria), were databased by the respective curators to add historical records to this study. Further data on species collected during previous surveys in the St Lucia area were obtained from Day et al. (1954), Millard and Broekhuysen (1970), Vrdoljak (2004) and Perkins (2014. Records of specimens collected by the authors of the current study during preliminary investigations in the area carried out between 2008 and 2012 were also included. Most of this historical material has, however, not been examined by taxonomic specialists, except for the 2008-2012 collections. Identifications should therefore be considered with caution.

Identification and illustrations
Species identification was undertaken with reference to museum material and the most recent literature available on the specific taxa. Characteristics of male genitalia were generally used as the key criterion for species identification and separation. Digital photographs of the dorsal habitus of each species were taken using a EOS 600D digital camera fitted to a Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG macro lens for larger specimens (≥ 1.5 cm) and a Leica Z6 APO for smaller specimens (< 1.5 cm). Image stacks were produced by hand, and combined using Zerene Stacker software (www.zerenesystems. com). To facilitate future identification and monitoring exercises, an annotated and illustrated list was compiled of all species identified in the preliminary collections of 2008-2012 and during the three dedicated surveys conducted in November 2013, July 2014 and January/February 2015 (Appendix 1).

Statistical analysis
Multivariate techniques were used to analyse spatial trends in the composition of polyphagan beetle assemblages at St Lucia. Beetle data were converted to presence-absence and assemblage similarity amongst sites was analysed using the Bray-Curtis coefficient. Non-metric multidimensional scaling (MDS) was used to depict beetle assemblages at St Lucia on a two-dimensional plot. Differences in beetle assemblage composition across the regions of St Lucia (Eastern Shores, Western Shores and False Bay) and waterbody types (excluding seeps and flats as only one of each was sampled) were tested using non-parametric permutational MANOVA (PERMANOVA, Anderson 2001), using the Bray-Curtis coefficient for construction of the dissimilarity matrix. As with the multivariate data (assemblage composition), the univariate measure of species richness (number of species per waterbody) was also compared across both regions and waterbody types, this time using the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test. Linear regression was used to assess the relationship between the number of polyphagan taxa recorded per site and that recorded for the adephagans by Perissinotto et al. (2016).
Multidimensional scaling was performed using PRIMER v6 software Warwick 2001, Clarke andGorley 2006). Non-parametric permutational MANOVA was performed using the PERMANOVA routine in the PERMANOVA+ add-on package (Anderson et al. 2008) to PRIMER v6 software. P-values for PERMANOVA models were tested using 9999 unrestricted permutations of the raw data. The Kruskal-Wallis tests on species richness and linear regression were performed using Statistica 12 software for Windows (Statsoft Inc. 2015). All tests were performed using an a priori significance level of α = 0.05.

Results
The sites sampled during this survey reflect the relative abundance of the various waterbody types encountered on the St Lucia coastal plain, with groundwater-fed depressions and valley bottom wetlands predominating, although several small rivers, a wetland flat and a seep were also sampled, in addition to the estuarine lake itself. Freshwater wetlands around Lake St Lucia were mostly small (< 2 ha), shallow (< 1 m maximum depth) and extensively vegetated. Further details on the physico-chemistry of the waterbodies sampled at St Lucia are provided by Perissinotto et al. (2016).

Historical records
Polyphagan taxa collected from St Lucia and surroundings prior to the current survey are listed in Table 3. A total of 49 taxa were previously recorded from the region, but of these, only 19 represent species-level records. Nineteen unpublished museum records were found from our extensive search of museum collection records across South Africa (including material stored by the authors at UKZN). Of these, 15 are species-level records, 10 of which were also recorded during the collections of the current study (2013-2015: indicated by an asterisk in Table 3). Thirty-one aquatic polyphagan taxa    have been reported for St Lucia from previously published studies of the system (unpublished M.Sc. thesis in the case of Vrdoljak 2004), although only five of these are species-level records (three of which were also recorded in the current study), reflecting the ecological rather than taxonomic focus of these studies. Although Heteroceridae and Scirtidae are listed in Table 3, members of these families were not recorded in the collections of the current study.

Patterns of assemblage composition
The composition of polyphagan beetle assemblages was similar between the Western and Eastern Shores of St Lucia, as reflected by the high degree of overlap of sites from these two regions in the MDS plot (Fig. 2a). Assemblages from False Bay show some distinction from those of the other two regions, with sites generally placed toward the left of the plot in Fig. 2a. The PERMANOVA results (Table 4) confirm these patterns, reporting a significant overall difference in assemblage composition of sites across the three regions sampled, with post hoc pairwise tests indicating that the overall difference was driven by the distinctness of the False Bay sites (Table 4a). The different waterbody types at St Lucia did not appear to harbour distinct assemblages of polyphagan beetles, with sites from the different waterbody types overlapping widely in the MDS plot (Fig. 2b). This overlap is confirmed by the PERMANO-VA results, reporting no significant difference in assemblage composition across wetland types (Table 4b).

Species richness patterns
Kruskal-Wallis tests showed that polyphagan beetle richness did not differ significantly between the three regions of St Lucia (KW-H 2, 37 = 0.9006, p = 0.6374) or between waterbody types (KW-H 5, 37 = 4.2675, p = 0.5116). Mean richness across all sites and sampling trips was 6.4±5.9 (SD) species per site, the high standard deviation reflecting large variation in the number of species recorded per site. The boxplots in Fig. 3 provide a visual depiction of the median and range of richness values across sites, grouped firstly by region (Fig. 3a) and secondly by waterbody type (Fig. 3b). Although median richness per site was low (~ 4 species) in each of the three regions of St Lucia, the distribution was skewed; the non-outlier ranges of all three regions including sites with 15 or more species (Fig. 3a). In terms of waterbody types, the boxplot (Fig. 3b) does not reveal any clear pattern of differences among groups. 'Wetland flat' and 'seep' categories were each represented by only a single site sampled on one occasion (January/February 2015) and were both relatively rich in taxa (15 and 12 species). Four sites yielded only a single species (sites 7A, 2B, 11B and 12B; Fig. 3c). The three richest samples were all collected during the mid-summer wet season sampling trip in January/February 2015, from a depression wetland at False Bay (site 27C with 24 species), a depression wetland on the Eastern Shores (site 14C with 20 species) and a valley bottom wetland at   False Bay (site 29C with 19 species - Fig. 3c). Polyphagan species richness per site was highly correlated (r = 0.8605, P < 0.001, Fig. 4) with the richness of adephagans sampled concurrently at the same sites ).

Discussion
The dedicated surveys of the St Lucia coastal plain between 2013 and 2015 have revealed 37 aquatic polyphagan species, which predominantly reside in the small freshwater wetlands surrounding the main lake body. Given that ca. 360 species of aquatic Polyphaga have been listed for southern Africa (Stals and de Moor 2007), the St Lucia system houses at least 10% of the aquatic polyphagan fauna of this biodiverse region. If historical records are taken into account and the seven species-level museum records (Table 3) are added to the 37 species collected during the current study, then St Lucia apparently supports at least 12% of regional diversity.
The number of Polyphaga collected at St Lucia represents approximately half the richness of hydradephagan beetles (68 taxa) reported from the same set of waterbodies by Perissinotto et al. (2016). A greater richness of the Adephaga over Polyphaga in aquatic systems has been reported elsewhere. Apenborn (2013) reported 122 species of water beetles from eight weeks of collecting effort at the Panguana research station in lowland rainforest of central Peru (Hendrich et al. 2015). Of these, around 40 belonged to the Polyphaga and 80 to the Adephaga; a ratio of ~1:2 (Polyphaga: Adephaga) as in the current study. However, this is not always the case and the ratio appears to vary regionally. For instance, Lake Najun (approximately 100 km 2 ) and its immediate tributaries in the Philippines produced 49 coleopteran species, of which 38 belonged to the Polyphaga, with only 10 Adephaga (Freitag and Pangantihon 2010). In a comprehensive checklist of aquatic beetle diversity of the Iberian Peninsula in the Mediterranean region, Ribera et al. (1998) reported 622 aquatic beetle species, however, largely due to the high regional richness of Hydraenidae (138 species), the total number of Polyphaga was 401 species, considerably outnumbering the Adephaga at 198 species. Chaco National Park and El Cachapé Wildlife Refuge in the humid Chaco Province of northern Argentina, which similarly to St Lucia is also a sub-tropical lowland plain area, albeit non-coastal, yielded 122 species, of which approximately half (60 species) belonged to the Polyphaga and the remainder were adephagans (Libonatti et al. 2013). In terms of richness, the samples were dominated by Hydrophilidae (43 species), which here even outnumbered Dytiscidae (37 species). At St Lucia Dytiscidae make up a much larger component of the fauna than Hydrophilidae, with 52 dytiscid species ) in comparison to the 27 hydrophilid species reported from the same waterbodies in the current study. This ratio is roughly in line with that reported for the Afrotropical region as a whole, given that approximately 1,060 dytiscid species have been described thus far for the region in comparison to ca. 450 hydrophilids (Jäch and Balke 2008). In their global assessment of aquatic coleopteran species diversity, Jäch and Balke (2008) report a total of approximately 7,130 polyphagan species, in comparison to 5,126 Adephaga species, a ratio of ~1.4:1 in favour of Polyphaga. In the Afrotropical region the same authors report 1,400 species of Adephaga versus 1,200 of Polyphaga (Jäch and Balke 2008), a ratio of ~1.2:1 in favour of Adephaga. One reason for the relatively low numbers of polyphagan species compared to Adephaga in the current study is the complete absence of fast running waters from this lowland region. Such habitats support large numbers of species in families such as Hydraenidae and Elmidae, including in adjacent parts of South Africa, but such beetles were entirely absent from the areas sampled in iSimangaliso Park due to the lack of suitable habitats.
The St Lucia Polyphaga were generally dominated by widespread Afrotropical taxa, with only two endemic South African species being recorded (Paracymus amplus Wooldridge, 1977 andLimnebius probus Perkins, 2015). A similar pattern (dominance of widespread taxa) is apparent at St Lucia for other invertebrate groups such as the hydradephagan beetles ), gastropods , bivalves (Nel et al. 2012) and odonates (Hart et al. 2014). The pattern of high richness and low endemism for polyphagan water beetles at St Lucia adds further evidence to the notion that invertebrate endemism decreases, whilst diversity increases, from the south-west to the north-east of South Africa (Stals and de Moor 2007, Perissinotto et al. 2016). A new species of Hydrophilidae, Hydrobiomorpha perissinottoi, was discovered and described from the collections of the current study (see Bilton 2016). This species was collected in good numbers in a variety of peripheral wetlands within the St Lucia system, although it is likely that its distribution extends throughout the broader region of Maputaland and beyond. Five species recorded in this survey are new to South Africa (Table 2), highlighting the poor state of knowledge of aquatic beetle distribution patterns in the region (see also Stals and de Moor 2007). Our survey highlights the need for further taxonomic work on some genera in the region, including Hydrochus, Enochrus, Helochares and Coelostoma, for which reliable species-level determinations are currently difficult or impossible.
In terms of the distribution of species within St Lucia, only five taxa (Berosus viticollis Boheman, 1851, Enochrus (Methydrus) sp., Hydrochara fulvofemorata, Sternolophus solieri Laporte, 1840 and Coelostoma sp. 2) were recorded from the margins of the lake body itself, and most taxa were instead found only in surrounding freshwater wetlands. Twelve taxa were taken with a light trap set up near the lake shore (sites 31A and 31C in November 2013 and February 2015 respectively), which captured flying adults that most likely were dispersing, perhaps from the nearby lake body. Polyphagan beetles formed a relatively distinct assemblage at False Bay, whilst the Western and Eastern Shores harbored very similar assemblages (Fig. 2a, Table 4). This same pattern was reported by Perissinotto et al. (2016) for hydradephagan beetle assemblages at St Lucia. Whilst the Eastern and Western Shores sites were generally on grassy sunlit plains, the False Bay sites occurred in dense dry woodland and were often heavily shaded, with lower resultant water temperatures (see Perissinotto et al. 2016). Although False Bay may have been distinctive in terms of its assemblage composition, the various regions of St Lucia appear to support approximately even numbers of polyphagan taxa and no region in particular was significantly elevated in terms of its species richness (Figure 3a), a finding similarly reported for the Hydradephaga of St Lucia by Perissinotto et al. (2016).
Polyphagan beetle assemblage composition did not differ between waterbody types (Fig. 2b, Table 4b), suggesting that the distribution of the species sampled, at least in the case of adults, is not affected by wetland type. Species richness also did not differ across waterbody types (Fig. 3b), further suggesting that beetles occur across the wide range of freshwater wetland type at St Lucia. That said, the two most species-rich sites sampled (20 and 24 species in sites 14C and 27C respectively) were both depression wetlands. A similar, but more pronounced pattern was reported for the Hydradephaga by Perissinotto et al. (2016), who showed that 5 of the 6 most speciose St Lucia sites were temporary depression wetlands. Polyphagan richness per site was strongly correlated with hydradephagan richness (Fig. 4) and the three most speciose sites in the current study (sites 27C, 14C and 29C) were also the most speciose for Hydradephaga. In contrast to the high beetle diversity recorded from small temporary freshwater wetlands in this study and by Perissinotto et al. (2016), other aquatic invertebrate assemblages at St Lucia have been found to be more diverse in the permanent fresh waterbodies (e.g. Hart et al. 2014) or in the estuarine lake body itself (e.g. Nel et al. 2012.

Conclusions
The majority of prior aquatic research within the iSimangaliso Wetland Park has focused on the estuarine lake itself, rather than the surrounding freshwater wetlands. Our study adds evidence in addition to that of Perissinotto et al. (2016) (hydradephagan beetles) and Hart et al. (2014) (odonates) that a high biodiversity is supported by the lesser-known freshwater systems of the park, emphasizing the importance of this UNESCO World Heritage Site as a biodiversity hotspot worthy of long-term conservation efforts. Although the park itself enjoys World Heritage status, much of the St Lucia catchment has become degraded by intensive land-use practices such as commercial plantations and agriculture. These practices have resulted in a drastically reduced input of freshwater to the lake system (Perissinotto et al. 2013) that, together with a prolonged drought between 2002 and 2010, caused severe hypersalinity in the estuarine lake and a drastic loss of biodiversity (Whitfield and Taylor 2009, Carrasco and Perissinotto 2012. Sampling in the current study was undertaken during a relatively wet period for the system, following the almost decade-long drought and hence most of the temporary wetlands on the coastal plain were flooded. Models of future climate conditions for the region predict increased variability in rainfall and an increase in extreme climatic events (e.g. drought or flood) linked to global climate change (Shongwe et al. 2009, Davis 2011, Dallas and Rivers-Moore 2014. Further study is thus warranted into the potential effects of a changing climate and intensifying catchment land use on the invertebrate assemblages that inhabit the park's freshwater wetlands. Our results, taken together with those of Perissinotto et al. (2016), indicate that beetle biodiversity in freshwater ecosystems of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park is relatively high in a southern African context. However, to what degree this is an artefact of the generally poor state of knowledge of southern African water beetles can be better revealed by conducting comparably rigorous studies in other freshwater habitats of the region.

Appendix I
Annotated and illustrated checklist of the Polyphaga of the Lake St Lucia system, 2013-2015.
The following list includes photographs of all species recorded during the dedicated water beetle surveys conducted by the authors during the period 2013 to 2015.    Previously recorded in fresh water wetlands on the Eastern Shores of Lake St Lucia by Vrdoljak (2004)  Remarks. Ponds and other lentic waterbodies rich in vegetation.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa and Madagascar; apparently reaching the Palaearctic in Turkey.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015. Previously recorded at St Lucia and Dukandlovu by SANC -years not specified.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa. Also reported from China.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central, Northern and Eastern Africa; reaching the Palaearctic in Egypt and Morocco.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in July 2014 and January/February 2015.

Amphiops uhligi Hebauer, 1995
Remarks. Found in dense vegetation in a small wetland at St Lucia.
Distribution. Namibia, Botswana and Zambia. New record for South Africa.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Eastern Shores in January/February 2015.     Régimbart, 1906. Remarks. Ponds and lagoons, particularly with exposed substrate and some mineralisation/salinity.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa and Madagascar and the Seychelles; reaching the Palaearctic in Egypt.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015. Previously recorded at False Bay by Day et al. (1954) and Millard and Broekhuysen (1970) in 1948.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa and Madagascar.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores and False Bay in November 2013.

Remarks. Lentic waters, in vegetation.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa; reaching the Palaearctic in Egypt.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in November 2013 and January/February 2015.

Remarks. Lentic waters, in vegetation.
Distribution. Widespread to Western, Central and Eastern Africa.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015.
Distribution. Namibia (Caprivi Strip) and Botswana (Okavango). New record for South Africa.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Eastern Shores in January/February 2015.
Distribution. Widespread in Afrotropical Region, including Madagascar.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015.
Distribution. Widespread in South Africa and also recorded from Angola and Namibia.
St Lucia records. Recorded at Western Shores, Eastern Shores and False Bay in January/February 2015.
Distribution. Eastern South Africa. Species recently described, but so far only known from South Africa.
St Lucia records. Recorded at False Bay in January/February 2015.