Critters of the Poor Knights Islands

Critters of the Poor Knights Islands

Te Papa’s curator of terrestrial vertebrates Dr Colin Miskelly recently visited the Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve, off the Northland coast, as part of a research team tracking the at-sea movements of Buller’s shearwaters. The project is led by Graeme Taylor of the Department of Conservation, and is intended to identify the marine environments used by these elegant seabirds, both when raising young and when on migration. Here, Colin illustrates some of the large invertebrates that also occur on the islands.

The Poor Knights Islands are a treasure trove for large invertebrates, many of which have been wiped out by introduced predators on the mainland. The long isolation of the islands has also meant that some endemic species have evolved – i.e. species that only ever occurred on the Poor Knights Islands.

Flax snails were abundant under rocks and in seabird burrows, emerging on damp nights to graze on fallen leaves. It is thought that these large snails were introduced to the Poor Knights Islands from the Northland mainland by Maori.

Flax snails (Placostylus hongii), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Flax snails (Placostylus hongii), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Amborhytida dunniae is a medium-sized carnivorous snail that also occurs in declining numbers on the Northland mainland. We found one among leaf litter on a damp night.

Amborhytida dunniae, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Amborhytida dunniae, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

One of the most surprising finds of the trip was a previously unknown large leaf-veined slug (family Athoracophoridae). We found four large animals (10 cm long at rest) on the sunny northern side of a towai trunk on a hot summer afternoon. They had probably been caught in the open after climbing to the canopy during rain the night before. These impressive slugs proved to be a new record for the Poor Knights Islands, and are likely to be a new species in an as-yet unnamed genus. Two other similar species occur at Waipoua/Trounson in Northland, and Hikurangi in the Bay of Plenty.

Giant leaf-veined slugs sun-bathing on a towai trunk on Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. This species was previously unknown to science. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Giant leaf-veined slugs sun-bathing on a towai trunk on Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. This species was previously unknown to science. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Giant centipede (Cormocephalus rubriceps). This large centipede (up to 25 cm) is widespread in the North Island and also in Australia, but reaches its largest size on rat-free offshore islands. They were mainly seen on the forest floor at night, actively hunting for large insects and lizards. A few were seen in seabird burrows in the daytime, which we tried to block out of our minds as we reached in to extract shearwater adults and chicks.

Large, fast and venomous - a very good reason to keep your tent firmly zipped closed. Giant centipede on Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Large, fast and venomous – a very good reason to keep your tent firmly zipped closed. Giant centipede (Cormocephalus rubriceps) on Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Poor Knights giant weta (Deinacrida fallai). Second in size only to the Little Barrier giant weta, this is one of New Zealnd’s largest insects. One female we weighed was 49 grams. They stayed well-hidden during the day, but emerged at night to browse on leaves, and many females were seen laying their eggs in the soil of the forest floor.

A female Poor Knights giant weta sits on the author's hand. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
A female Poor Knights giant weta sits on the author’s hand. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
A female Poor Knights giant weta laying eggs on the forest floor. Note the position of her long ovipositor (egg-laying appendage) compared to the previous photograph. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
A female Poor Knights giant weta laying eggs on the forest floor. Note the position of her long ovipositor (egg-laying appendage) compared to the previous photograph. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Like all insects, weta have to moult their hard exoskeleton in order to grow. The moulting female shown here was suspended upside down from a flax bush when first found. She then turned around and ate every last scrap of her old skin, recycling the precious chiton while her new skin hardened. By the morning there was nothing left of the out-sized exoskeleton, and the still pale newly-moulted female was hiding nearby.

Female Poor Knights giant weta moulting, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Female Poor Knights giant weta moulting, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
A freshly moulted Poor Knights giant weta consumes its old exoskeleton. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
A freshly moulted Poor Knights giant weta consumes its old exoskeleton. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Poor Knights giant jumping weta (Gymnoplectron giganteum). New Zealand’s largest jumping weta (or cave weta) is found only on the Poor Knights Islands, and has been measured at 45 cm from antenna tip to the tip of the hind leg (though the body makes up only 10% of this). We mainly saw them on damp nights, when they ran and jumped rapidly away from our lights.

Poor Knights giant jumping weta (Gymnoplectron giganteum), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Poor Knights giant jumping weta (Gymnoplectron giganteum), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Poor Knights ground weta (Hemiandrus sp. aff. anomalus). This yet-to-be-named endemic species emerged from its burrows in large numbers on damp nights, otherwise few were seen. With a body-length of 35 mm, and shorter appendages, it is much smaller than its more famous cousins mentioned above.

Poor Knights ground weta, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Poor Knights ground weta, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Clapping cicada (Amphipsalta cingulata). Common throughout the northern North Island and around Wellington, the clapping cicada spends most of its life as flightless nymphs living in the soil. The song of male clapping cicadas is one of the distinctive sounds of the New Zealand summer.

Clapping cicada (Amphipsalta cingulata) nymph, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Clapping cicada (Amphipsalta cingulata) nymph, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Adult clapping cicada (Amphipsalta cingulata), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Adult clapping cicada (Amphipsalta cingulata), Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Flax weevil (Anagotus fairburni). These large flightless weevils feed only on flax (harakeke and wharariki), with the adults emerging at night to chew on the tough, fibrous leaves. Formerly found throughout New Zealand, they are now confined to rodent-free habitats, including a few mountain tops. They are most readily found on pest-free islands off northern New Zealand, in Cook Strait, and in Fiordland.

Flax weevil (Anagotus fairburni) feeding on flax/harakeke, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Flax weevil (Anagotus fairburni) feeding on flax/harakeke, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Turbott’s weevil (Anagotus turbotti). Slightly larger than its flax-eating relative, Turbott’s weevil has an even more restricted distribution – on the Poor Knights Islands, Three Kings Islands, and Muriwhenua Island in the Chickens Islands. All these islands have never had rats, whereas all the larger islands in the Hen & Chickens group had introduced Pacific rats (kiore) until they were eradicated from all but one of the islands. We saw about ten individuals, all at night, and mainly on karaka trunks. Three were seen feeding on ngaio leaves on the same bush, and one was on flax alongside its smaller cousins.

Turbott’s weevil (Anagotus turbotti) on ngaio, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Turbott’s weevil (Anagotus turbotti) on ngaio, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Purple rock crab (Leptograpsus variegatus). These large crabs are widely distributed in rocky intertidal areas in northern New Zealand, but are extraordinarily abundant on the Poor Knights Islands. The full protection they receive from the combined (land-based) nature reserve and adjoining marine reserve gives a hint of the impacts human hunting pressure has had on our marine organisms elsewhere. At several points on the wave platform on Aorangi Island I was able to count over 50 purple rock crabs as they scuttled away from me. They were typically hyper-sensitive to movement, but one group were so intent on feasting on a dead shearwater that they allowed my close approach. Another was seen feeding on a dead bellbird at a brackish water hole on the edge of the forest, but it is not known whether it caught the bird or scavenged its corpse.

Purple rock crabs (Leptograpsus variegatus) scavenge the corpse of a Buller's shearwater, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa
Purple rock crabs (Leptograpsus variegatus) scavenge the corpse of a Buller’s shearwater, Aorangi Island, Poor Knights Islands Nature Reserve. Image: Colin Miskelly, Te Papa

Acknowledgements: Thanks to Graeme Taylor of the Department of Conservation (DOC) for organising and leading the visit, and Bruce Marshall (Te Papa) and Gary Barker (Landcare Reasearch) for their thoughts on the giant slugs.

Related blogs
Life through a burrowscope lens (Part 2) – subterranean Poor Knights Islands
Night life on the Poor Knights Islands
Reptiles of the Poor Knights Islands
Birds of the Poor Knights Islands
Critters of Titi Island Nature Reserve, Marlborough Sounds

Critters of Ohinau Island

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