A remarkable New Zealand discovery tops iNaturalist in 2024

With our small size and population, Aotearoa New Zealand doesn’t often top global charts. However, in 2024, a discovery from our country became the most popular observation on the iNaturalist platform, outshining over 50 million other observations made that year! Te Papa Scientist Lara Shepherd discusses a few of New Zealand’s most notable iNaturalist findings of the last year.

iNaturalist, a citizen science platform, connects people with their local biodiversity while generating valuable data for scientists. Each year, iNaturalist releases a Year in Review summarising the year’s discoveries. In 2024, 1.3 million people made a collective 50 million observations globally – nearly 10 million more than the previous year! The biggest spike in observations occurred during the City Nature Challenge when nearly 700 cities participated.

The Frosted Phoenix rises from the dead straight to the top of iNaturalist

One of the most anticipated categories in the ‘Year in Review’ is the most popular observations – those with the most comments and ‘faves’. This year, an observation from New Zealand took the crown! The star of the show was a moth thought to be extinct – the Frosted Phoenix (Titanomis sisyrota). The first-ever photo of a living specimen was taken by a Swedish tourist on Stewart Island in March.

A photo of a live Frosted Phoenix moth, side on. The moth is speckled grey and dark grey and it is sitting on a log.
The first ever photo of a live Frosted Phoenix moth. Photo by Pav Johnsson, via iNaturalist CC-BY-4.0

Moth expert Dr Robert Hoare’s comment on the observation gives important context on the discovery:

This is the greatest Lepidoptera find in the history of iNaturalistNZ.

No other living soul has seen this moth, the Holy Grail of NZ moths. It was last seen in 1959 and at one time was believed extinct, but I always thought there was hope. The enigma is enhanced by the fact that the family placement of the moth is unknown, but it may belong somewhere in the region of Cossidae.

Truly astonishing! Never recorded from Stewart Island before, but there is a 1900 specimen from Haldane, Southland not so far away. This is the 11th individual ever seen.

A split image with one side showing three Frosted Phoenix (Titanomis sisyrota) moths on a card, and the other showing just one on another card.
Te Papa has half of the eight known surviving Frosted Phoenix (Titanomis sisyrota) museum specimens in its insect collection. The most recent was collected in 1921. Photos by Lara Shepherd (left) and Jean-Clade Stahl (right). Te Papa

The Frosted Phoenix is one of the contestants in the 2025 New Zealand Bug of the Year competition. You can vote for it here.

A huge loss to the New Zealand iNaturalist community

The most popular iNaturalist observations are usually unexpected discoveries, such as the Frosted Phoenix, or exceptional photographs. However, the second most popular observation from New Zealand in 2024 has a much sadder story; it was the last observation posted by Stephen Thorpe, who was fatally stabbed in Auckland in August. Stephen was a well-known entomologist in the iNaturalist community identifying over 90,000 observations for others. Read more about Stephen’s contributions to iNaturalist and entomology here. Stephen also identified more than 7,000 specimens in Te Papa’s collections.

A split image with An endemic New Zealand spider, Pahoroides balli in a jar with a museum label on it on one side, and the other image is the jar again with a bigger view of the label, which says "Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, PO Box 467, Wellington, AS.001789".
A tiny endemic New Zealand spider, Pahoroides balli (AS.001789), one of over 7000 Te Papa specimens identified by Stephen Thorpe. This species was only named in 2011 by Te Papa spider experts Mike Fitzgerald and Phil Sirvid.

A secretive bird finally captured on film

The third most popular New Zealand observation is of a highly secretive bird found only on the remote subantarctic Auckland Islands. The Auckland Island rail (Lewinia muelleri) is a small bird which is more often heard than seen. Although photos exist of this species in captivity it was only first captured on camera in the wild last February when a chick was recorded with a trail camera.

A small dark bird is camouflaged in grass and dirt in some bush.
The first photo of an Auckland Island rail in the wild. Photo by Jake Osborne, via iNaturalist, CC-BY-4.0

Te Papa has a number of skins and the only known eggs of the Auckland Island rail in its bird collection. The eggs were in a nest that was abandoned five days after they were found.

Two beige-coloured eggs with brown spots on a black background. There is a size line marker in the lower left saying 1cm, which makes the eggs about just over two centimetres each, with the left one being slightly larger.
Auckland Island Rail, Lewinia muelleri, collected 22 November 1989, Maclaren Bay, Adams Island, New Zealand. CC BY 4.0. Te Papa (OR.024502)

2025 could be the year of your big discovery!

Now is a great time to start using iNaturalist – it might be you that makes the most-popular observation in 2025!

Read instructions for how to make observations with iNaturalist.

Further reading

2023’s most popular iNaturalist observations from New Zealand:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *