Chaoborus adults do not bite mammals or suck
blood. Larvae live in open waters and even sediments, where there may be little
oxygen for them to breathe. In some lakes they can be found as deep as . In these deep
anoxic waters they can avoid predation more easily than near the surface. They get around the fact that a normal air filled
invertebrate tracheal system would fail at these depths by having it reduced to just two air sacs. They are predaceous, and catch their prey with their modified
prehensile antennae. They look somewhat like
mosquito larvae, on which they
prey and frequently destroy in large numbers.
Chaoborus are considered opportunistic eaters, as their main diet consists of
copepods and
cladocerans, though they are believed to prefer copepods. However, they tend to select whatever prey enters its strike zone as it is not known for chasing prey. Prey selection also varies between species as head and mandible size dictate maximum prey size. '', resembling distant plumes of smoke over
Lake Malawi's water Their main predator is fish, which can cause a behavioral response due to light factors influenced by their presence. This fish factor causes an increase in the average depth the individuals can be found. This vertical migration behavior is believed to be a chemical reaction, rather than a visual or mechanical. In the
African Great Lakes of
Malawi and
Victoria (but not
Tanganyika where this genus is absent, perhaps because of chemical factors), huge swarms of
Chaoborus midges occur and are collected by local people to make
kungu cakes, biscuits or burgers, a local delicacy rich in
protein.
David Livingstone (1865) claimed that they "tasted not unlike caviare". '' adult ==Collection==