Deinacrida mahoenui, the Mahoenui giant wētā, is a flightless insect in the giant wētā family Anostostomatidae. It is endemic to the area of Mahoenui, New Zealand, and the world population for some time was restricted to a single patch of introduced gorse on farmland.

Mahoenui giant wētā

Nationally Endangered (NZ TCS)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Orthoptera
Suborder: Ensifera
Family: Anostostomatidae
Genus: Deinacrida
Species:
D. mahoenui
Binomial name
Deinacrida mahoenui
Gibbs, 1999

Description edit

 
A Mahoenui giant wētā, showing the common dark mahogany colouration. From its ovipositor it is clearly female.
 
The less-common golden yellow colouration of Deinacrida mahoenui.

Deinacrida mahoenui is a very large flightless insect: females weigh up to 19 grams (0.67 oz) and can be 75 millimetres (3.0 in) long, while males reach 12 g and 50 mm.[1] Females can be distinguished by their size and their long egg-laying spikes or ovipositors.

Uniquely amongst giant wētā, D. mahoenui has two colour morphs: mahogany brown (over two thirds of the population) and golden yellow (about 31%). A two-coloured female has even been found, having one side brown and the other yellow.[1]

Reproduction edit

 
Sculpture of a Mahoenui giant wētā (Deinacrida mahoenui) on the main street of Te Kūiti, New Zealand

Female Mahoenui giant wētā lay 200–400 eggs in autumn, burying them about 25 mm deep into the soil with their ovipositor. The eggs are about 7 mm long, and take 10 months to hatch, with the 8 mm nymphs emerging in March or April. Nymphs grow rapidly, eating other insects (they are cannibalistic) as well as leaves, bark, and leaf litter. They shed their exoskeleton every month until August, then bimonthly until February, going through 10 stages or instars.[1]

Once they reach maturity in autumn, females signal they are ready to mate with pheromones in their droppings. Males follow this scent and caress the females with their antennae before mating takes place. Adults die after egglaying, just before winter. Their life cycle in total lasts 22–24 months, very short compared to some other species of large wētā which can live for over 10 years in captivity.[1]

Habitat edit

These giant wētā were first discovered living in tiny (1–5 hectare) remnants of tawa forest at Mahoenui, a small community in New Zealand's King Country. In 1987 a larger population was found nearby, living in farmland covered with introduced gorse. An area of 240 hectares (590 acres) of gorse was purchased by the Department of Conservation to create a wētā reserve.[1]

Gorse is an invasive weed in New Zealand pasture, and not the wētā's natural habitat, but in combination with introduced livestock it had formed a refuge for the species. Cattle had opened out the gorse canopy, and browsing by goats have cropped it into thick hedges, impenetrable to the introduced rats that are the main threat to D. mahoenui.[1]

Conservation edit

External videos
  Meet the Locals (2007 TVNZ video about D. mahoenui)

Like most species of giant wētā, D. mahoenui are very vulnerable to introduced mammalian predators such as cats, stoats, possums, rats, and hedgehogs. The Mahoenui Giant Weta Scientific Reserve is also extremely vulnerable to fire, as gorse is very flammable.

Since 1989, more than 2,000 D. mahoenui have been relocated to seven mainland and island areas, but appear to be thriving at just two of these sites.

Some have been released near Waitomo Caves at Ruakuri Scenic Reserve, 200 were put onto Mahurangi Island near the Coromandel Peninsula, and 287 were released at Warrenheip, a 16 ha private reserve near Cambridge.[1] In April 2012 up to 100 were introduced into the Maungatautari ecological area.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Mahoenui Giant Weta (Deinacrida mahoenui)" (PDF). Waitomo Education Service. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Giant weta on the move". stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 16 April 2012.

External links edit

  • Mahoenui giant wētā discussed on RNZ Critter of the Week, 8 July 2016