Boreus elegans Carpenter,
the ESBC Insect

The Society's Official Insect, a female Boreus elegans Carpenter in silhouette.
Order: Mecoptera, the Scorpionflies and Hangingflies
Family: Boreidae, the Snow Scorpionflies
The Boreidae (from the Greek "Boreas" -- the North Wind,
the North) or snow scorpionflies are small mecopterans that resemble minute
grasshoppers. The Holarctic genus Boreus, the only one of the family in
British Columbia, was chosen to represent the province for several reasons.
British Columbia is a province of mountains and snow, the characteristic
habitat of these insects. They are striking and distinctive, with interesting
and unusual behaviour. Five of the seven known Canadian species live in the
province.
Boreus elegans is the most distinctive of the British Columbia snow
scorpionflies. It is considerably larger and redder in colour than the other
four species of Boreus; as its name suggests, it is the most handsome of
the genus. In Canada it occurs only in British Columbia. Although it is not
distributed as widely in the province as some of the other species (B.
californicus, B. pilosus), it inhabits the Coast Range and lives among the
mountains by the sea, the two features most often associated with our province
(and now linked with the image of Boreus on the ESBC seal).
Boreus adults are dark long-legged insects which appear in the fall
and winter. They are often found hopping and walking on the surface of the
snow, where they are conspicuous due to their movement and contrasting colour.
The male has vestigial, bristle-like wings with which he grasps the female
during mating. In the female, the wings are further reduced to small scales.
The female has a long and conspicuous ovipositor.
The larvae are C-shaped grubs with a well-developed head capsule and three
pairs of thoracic legs. They live at the base of the moss and clubmoss plants
on which they apparently feed, although they probably also are saprophagous and
carnivorous.
This is a slightly modified version of an article in the inaugural issue of Boreus (April 1981), written by the editor at the time, Rob Cannings.
At the ESBC Directors meeting on 27 November 1980, those present chose
the genus Boreus (Mecoptera: Boreidae) to represent the Society on a new
logo. Dr. Cannings was given the task of recommending a particular species of Boreus for this honour. His only instructions were: "Make sure you
choose a good species
we dont want the Societys insect to end
up as a forgotten synonym in a few years!" Boreus elegans Carpenter
was the final choice.
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