Chuck,

Once they molt, they return to the water they came from. I have heard some
scientists say that they return within hundreds of feet of the water they
came from with great accuracy. What you saw alive in your lampshade was a
Dun, or basically a young adult mayfly that probably emerged from a nearby
body of water within the previous 12-24 hours. They are drawn to lights at
night time. Gas station stall lights near streams/rivers/lakes are often
clogged with mayflies, caddis and stoneflies you just have to look up. This
is probably how yours came to rest in your lampshade. It was drawn to the
light. They hang out for a few hours or maybe a day. They shed their Dun
shuck and wait for the temperature/humidity or whatever conditions are
right to return to the stream. At this stage they are now a spinner and the
only thing they have left to do is mate and die within the next few minutes
or hours.

What you saw was very likely its already muted colors. The hexes I have
seen don't necessarily get brighter, but the belly gets brown.

Scott

On Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 8:16 PM, Chuck Alexander <
[email protected]> wrote:

> **
> Folks: I have tried and tried to take a photo of it, but remember a cpl
> weeks back and that beautiful "Hex" mayfly landed on my lampshade???? Well,
> today, my wife was cleaning house and found his shed "exoskeleton" stuck to
> the lampshade. It was just like when a snake sheds it's skin. I didn't
> think these flies had a long enough lifespan to shed like that?? My wife
> seems to thing that the reason he was such a vivid color of yellow/gold is
> that he had JUST shed his skin. What say ya'll?? Thanks, Chuck
>
> I'll continue to try and take a photo, but I can't seem to get the
> lighting/focus just right to show it for how it really looks in person.
>
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