A comparison was made of the relative abundance of three species of black-fly pupae colonising three natural substrates in the River Assob, in central Nigeria. Simulium hargreavesi, S. squamosum and S. vorax preferred trailing roots, whereas S. cervicomutum, S. unicomutum and S. impukane preferred dead leaves and to a lesser extent, rocks.
In order to see whether this was a preference between cylindrical and flat surfaces, polythene strips were compared with polythene strings and a smooth surface was compared with a rough one. Results are presented for the three most abundant species S. squamosum, S. hargreavesi and S. cervicomutum. All markedly avoided the rough string. S. squamosum and S. hargreavesi preferred smooth strings, whereas S. cervicomutum had no significant preference between smooth strips and strings (although slightly preferring strips). These findings are discussed in relation to natural habitats and sampling bias.