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Stream Macroinvertebrates

A Real World Protocol  ·  Field-Based STEM  ·  Tony Jones  ·  Years 1–13  ·  No specialist equipment needed
Every NZ school within walking distance of a stream has access to a world-class biology laboratory. Stream macroinvertebrates, the insects, snails, and larvae living among the pebbles, are direct indicators of water quality. Students who have knelt at a stream, scooped a net through muddy water, and watched something unexpected emerge arrive at the classroom with something that belongs to them. No AI can manufacture that starting point. This protocol gives you everything you need to make it happen.
What You Need
  • White flat-bottomed containers Dish tubs, bus trays, or large ice cream containers. White is important because macroinvertebrates show clearly against a pale base. Avoid coloured containers.
  • Bug nets or pond nets Inexpensive butterfly nets work well. One per pair of students is ideal. A net with a flat edge scoops more efficiently than a round one.
  • Magnifying glasses One per group minimum. A hand lens of 5x to 10x magnification is sufficient for identifying most common species.
  • Mobile phone For photographing specimens in the tray. Students carry their field data back to the classroom in the photos they took at the stream.
Tip: A white ice cream container is the single most useful piece of equipment. Bring one per group. The contrast between the pale base and the dark organisms makes identification straightforward even without a magnifying glass.
The Technique
1
Find a riffle

Look for shallow, fast-flowing water moving over pebbles. This is where macroinvertebrates are most abundant. Avoid deep, slow-moving pools for sampling.

2
Position the net

Hold the net downstream of where you will disturb the streambed, with the opening facing into the current. Keep the bottom edge of the net touching the stream floor.

3
Disturb the pebbles

Use your foot or hand to agitate the streambed for about 30 seconds just upstream of the net. The current carries dislodged creatures directly into the net. This is called kick sampling.

4
Transfer to the tray

Empty the net into a white tray filled with stream water. Rinse the net thoroughly into the tray. Small creatures cling to the mesh and are easily missed.

5
Observe and record

Use magnifying glasses to identify organisms. Tally each type found. Photograph specimens with a mobile phone before returning them to the stream.

6
Return everything

Release all specimens back to the stream after observation. Return the water in the tray. Leave the site exactly as you found it.

What You Are Looking For

The variety and sensitivity of organisms found tells the story of stream health. A healthy stream supports a wide range of species, including sensitive ones that cannot survive pollution.

Organism Key features Indicator
Stonefly larvae Flat body, two tails, clings to stones Very good
Mayfly larvae Three tails, leaf-shaped gills along abdomen Good
Caddisfly larvae Often found inside a case of stones or sticks Good
Freshwater snails Coiled shell, slides on hard surfaces Moderate
Water boatmen Oval body, paddle-shaped back legs Moderate
Midge larvae Thin, worm-like, often red in colour Poor
Aquatic worms Very thin, writhing movement Poor
Reading the result: Finding stonefly or mayfly larvae indicates clean, well-oxygenated water. Finding only midge larvae and worms suggests the stream is under stress. A diverse sample with many types is the best possible result.
Health and safety: As with any activity outside the classroom, please ensure your school's own EOTC requirements and health and safety procedures are followed. Your staff will know what that looks like for your context.

Back in the classroom: AI as thinking partner (Real World Ready Layer 2)

Students photograph their tray and ask AI: "We found stonefly larvae, mayfly larvae, and freshwater snails. What does this tell us about our stream's water quality?"
Students compare AI's response against the NIWA Macroinvertebrate Community Index. Where does AI agree? Where does it add nuance? Where is it wrong?
Students use AI to investigate one organism in depth: its life cycle, its sensitivity to pollutants, and what human activities in the catchment most threaten it.
For younger students: Show AI a photo of a creature from the tray and ask "What will this look like when it grows up?" The answer, a mayfly, a stonefly, a beetle, is one of the most surprising things a young scientist can discover about a stream.