Mass emergences of Hexagenia bilincata (Say) from the Upper Mississippi River tend to occur at intervals of about 6–11 days. It has seemed likely that the waves of emergence are indicators that sub-populations or broods ”have developed sympatrically and that the shortlived adults of one emergence peak are sexually isolated by time from adults of preceding and succeeding peaks. However, preliminary experiments with laboratory populations showed that the progeny resulting from eggs laid during the time of one mass emergence will emerge at intervals and en masse over an 11-month period. It seems probable that the broods in the river may include adults from last-instar nymphs of varying ages which have emerged at the same time. Complete sexual isolation, discrete gene pools, and resulting sympatric speciation of the broods therefore seem unlikely.