Terrestrial insects in cold climates generally experience much
lower temperatures than fish. Therefore, they have evolved more
active AFPs. For example, larvae of the beetle Dendroides canadensis from northern Indiana supercooled to approximately −20 ◦ C and
had a mean hemolymph thermal hysteresis of approximately 3 ◦ C
during recent relatively warm winters , but
supercooled to a mean of −25 ◦ C exhibiting a thermal hysteresis of 3–5 ◦ C during colder winters.