An overview is presented on the current worldwide status of aquatic in
sect conservation. Despite extensive habitat destruction or modificati
on, aquatic insects as a whole do not appear to have suffered as great
a proportional loss of species over the last century as members of ot
her groups. In North America, for example, only 204 species are consid
ered at risk out of a total fauna of over 10,000 species, and no speci
es has been documented as having gone extinct. Even so, aquatic insect
diversity is subject to a broad spectrum of threats, including chemic
al pollution of waters from industry and agriculture, physical destruc
tion of habitat from impoundments or drainage, and introduction of ali
en aquatic biota, primarily sport or aquarium fishes. Adequate legisla
tion exists in the United States and Europe to provide protection to a
quatic insect taxa at risk, but the implementation of this legislation
is often hampered by a lack of taxonomic and distributional knowledge
, and by a concentration of recovery efforts on more highly visible ve
rtebrate taxa. The case of the Ash Meadows Naucorid, the only aquatic
species currently protected under the Endangered Species Act, is exami
ned in detail. It is concluded that the listing of this species has ha
d no discernable effect in halting its population decline, partly due
to the fact that recovery efforts for endangered fishes have proven de
leterious to the insect. It is recommended that future listing efforts
be conducted in the context of national biological surveys, and that
an ecosystem rather than single species approach be applied to aquatic
conservation efforts.