Do such creatures exist? I can find info on terrestrial stem borers, and on some that specialize in emergent plants like rice. On a recent trip to south Georgia Kerry and I did some collecting at Grand Bay WMA outside of Valdosta. Brought some vegetation home to make a realistic home for the fish. The dominant species of plant where we collected is a floater/shallow rooter type deal that has a pretty thick stem. One plant has what would appear to be an inchworm in it. One that not only scrapes vigorously but also undulates like it's in a flooded chamber, which I believe it is. When it's scraping it thrusts itself out full length and pulls itself back in on itself, much like an inchworm on the move. It appears to flatten itself when it does the ungulation thing. I did make a video, but it is of the usual Knepley quality, so your imagination probably would give you a better picture. I can only see the creature when it's backlit by aquarium lights.
The photos are of the species of plant in question, Frogbit (Limnobia spongia), I think. This is not the same plant it is in, but it is the same species from the same site.
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0 downloadsBTW, this is a great site for Pygmy Killis if you're looking for some. There's Mud and Banded Sunfish, Fliers out the gazoo, Okefenokee Pygmy Sunfish, pickerel and tons of cool inverts there, too.