Nelson Mail

Surprise discovery of new native cricket in Kahurangi National Park

- Joanne Naish joanne.naish@stuff.co.nz

The surprise discovery of a tiny insect in Kahurangi National Park may help to solve the mystery of a cricket, and tell scientists more about New Zealand’s separation from other lands.

Conservati­on Minister Poto Williams said Department of Conservati­on (DOC) staff discovered the unnamed species of flightless and songless cricket when they surveyed the Heaphy River catchment in 2022. Three individual­s were found at the same place.

‘‘Until now, it has been understood that most crickets in NZ came here from Australia, and none of those had ever been seen in Kahurangi beech forest. There are some native crickets, but their habitat is open areas,’’ Williams said.

Crickets belong to a group of insects called Orthoptera, which includes grasshoppe­rs, katydids, weta, cave weta and mole crickets.

‘‘The Kahurangi finds appear to be the same as a 1990s record in the Canterbury Museum of an almost completely forgotten bush cricket. All that was known about it was that it was found somewhere in the northweste­rn South Island,’’ Williams said.

The find meant scientists now had a chance to study the insects in the wild and give them a genus and species name, she said. Mana whenua Ngati Waewae would also be able to choose to gift a common name to replace the current listing Gryllidae species A.

‘‘For me, this discovery reinforces the importance of the Aotearoa New Zealand biodiversi­ty strategy, which we are using to address the biodiversi­ty crisis. We have around 4000 species threatened or at risk of extinction. It’s exciting that we’ve been able to rediscover an insect we know little about and take steps to find out more.’’

The three crickets found in ahurangi appeared to be mature females, as they all had an egg -laying spike. They were less than 1cm long, had powerful back legs and, as they were flightless, their main means of escape from predators was jumping.

‘‘Unearthing a species unique to Aotearoa adds to the story of our ancient separation from other lands,’’ Williams said.

The bush crickets are likely to inform scientists of new ecological associatio­ns, but a great deal more work is required to accurately describe those connection­s.

DOC’s insect expert and science adviser, Eric Edwards, said the department’s Buller office had been monitoring biodiversi­ty in the area to see how pest animal and plant control had affected it.

‘‘We looked at bird life and forest health – monitoring plants, birds, insects. We started with some pitfall traps,’’ he said. Pitfall traps are like coffee cups dug into the dirt, which the insects fall into.

‘‘We got some samples and were working through them, and when we saw the crickets, that got us scratching our heads,’’ Edwards said.

‘‘When I looked, I thought, ‘It looks like a weta, but it’s not a weta’.’’

The species was different to other crickets because it lived in the bush and did not have any sound or wings.

‘‘That was the intriguing thing. New Zealand’s native frogs don’t croak, and our native crickets don’t sing,’’ Edwards said.

He consulted New Zealand experts who had heard about chance encounters with an unknown type of cricket, but their habitats were not known. ‘‘In this case, we have now got a geographic­al location, and that’s exciting.’’

He also consulted Australian experts, who confirmed that it was not a recent arrival from there.

‘‘We are still learning about it. It’s an undescribe­d species. Experts have interprete­d it as belonging to a group of crickets not usually known in New Zealand.’’

Edwards said that for now, DOC staff were calling it the Kahurangi cricket.

Staff had sought funding to be able to study the species in the wild, he said.

 ?? ?? A new unnamed species of cricket has been found on the West Coast.
A new unnamed species of cricket has been found on the West Coast.
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