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| Campbell Island
Research Poster
B eetles comprise the
largest group of invertebrates known in the world and, likewise,
are dominant in a number of species over most arthropod groups
in the subantarctic islands, with well over 100
species recorded to date (Gressitt & Wise 1971). Though
the weevils, the most diverse of the beetles, have been described
thoroughly by Kuschel (1964, 1971), there are many species and
records that need to be formally published (or confirmed) so that
the evolution and ecology of the beetles can be fully appreciated.
The arthropod fauna of Campbell Island was documented last century,
(see Gressitt 1964) and this island is perhaps the best studied
and surveyed among New Zealand's subantarctic islands. It was
discovered recently, however, that there was a new species of
pselaphine rove beetle (Staphylinidae) among fresh and older material,
and information on this species will be published soon (Carlton
& Leschen, submitted), taking the number of species on this
island to 44. In a recent survey of the remote Antipodes Islands
(2100 hectares), Marris (2000), reports 25 species and at least
7 new species of Carabidae, Cerambycidae, Salpingidae, and Staphylinidae.
By extrapolation, we may expect that the Auckland Islands (51
000 hectares), the largest and least known of the subantarctic
islands with at least 57 species known thus far (Marris 2000),
may have over 100 species, though work is necessary to document
in detail the beetle diversity on this and Snares Islands. The
beetle fauna of the Bounty Islands (135 hectares), with nine species,
is currently under study by John Marris (Lincoln University),
and Australia's Macquarie Island, about 200 kilometres south of
Campbell Island, has eight species (Greenslade 1990).
Based on survey work on Campbell Island, we determined
that only two genera (Holopsis (Corylophidae) and
Melanophthalma (Latridiidae), Figs 1 & 2) are associated
with microfungi, two are saprophagous and may be facultatively
mycophagous (Meropathus (Hydraenidae) and Paracatops
Leiodidae), and a single species feeds on lichen and other plant
material (Pseudhelops (Tenebrionidae)). We estimate a
higher diversity of mycophagous species in the Auckland Islands
that include an additional six families compared with Campbell
Island, including undescribed taxa from mycophagous families Cryptophagidae
(nr. Thortus) and Phloeostichidae (nr. Priasilpha).
We also observed Lepidoptera damage on Xylariaceae on Auckland
Islands, and it is likely that this is another important mycophagous
group in the subantarctic.
The beetles are providing suprising and important
insights towards understanding the origin of the subantarctic
fauna. Why, for example, do some Campbell Island beetle species
that may be closely related occur in more or less exactly the
same microhabitats throughout the island? Carlton & Leschen
(submitted) suggest that the two species of Pselaphotheseus,
members of the predatory group Pselaphinae (Staphylinidae), may
have undergone sympatric speciation (evolution without geographic
isolation). Though sympatric evolution has been evoked as a speciation
mechanism for many taxa present on other islands such Hawaii and
the Galapagos (see Otte & Endler 1989), this mode of speciation
remains controversial. Detailed cladistic analyses of insular
organisms (see Wagner & Funk 1995) reveal more complex patterns
of evolution that include dispersal (movement from one landmass
to another), radiation (speciation within a single area), and
vicariance (speciation facilitated by the formation of [usually]
geographic barriers between ancestral populations). Therefore,
the hypothesis that the two species of Campbell Island Pselaphotheseus
evolved in sympatry requires additional research. It is likely
that this genus is also present on the Auckland Islands.
The organismal affinities of the Campbell Plateau
are tied primarily with mainland New Zealand (see Gressitt et
al. 1964) and to a lesser extent to other south temperate and
subantarctic areas (Morrone 1998; Marris 2000). Based on distribution
data and cladistic information, Leschen et al. (submitted) reveals
that members of two unrelated groups of intertidal and wingless
beetles (Staphylinidae and Salpingidae) present on the Campbell
Plateau are either Gondwanan relicts of groups that were much
more widespread, or are sister taxa to northern Pacific relatives
9000 km away. The species Baeostethus chiltoni Broun
(Fig. 3), a member of liparocephaline Staphylinidae, is closely
related to members of the genus Liparocephalus distributed
in on the coasts of North America and northern Asia. These data
add a third biogeographic component to the Campbell Plateau biota,
which includes lineages that predate the separation of Gondwana
from Laurasia and are present (and widespread) in northern Holarctic
areas and restricted to New Zealand's subantarctic islands. This
pattern is also seen in one terrestrial group of beetles, the
gymnusine Aleocharinae (Hammond 1975; Klimaszewski 1979), with
the remarkable species Stylogymnusa subantarctica Hammond
present only on the Auckland Islands. This is one of the few beetles
in the world that has piercing-sucking mouthparts reminiscent
of similar structures present in other insect groups both living
and extinct.
Does the level of mycophagy increase as a function of latitude or vegetative
diversity and is the Campbell Plateau a mosaic of disharmonic species or is it a
separate piece of Gondwana distinct from New Zealand? Our on-going systematic,
inventory, and evolutionary work will focus on these basic questions.
LITERATURE CITED
-
Carlton, C.E.; Leschen, R.A.B. 2001: Species
in sympatry: Pselaphotheseus of Campbell Island (Coleoptera:
Staphylinidae: Pselaphinae). (submitted)
- Greenslade, P. 1990: Notes on the biogeography
of the free-living terrestrial invertebrate fauna of Macquarie
Island with an annotated checklist. Papers and Proceedings
of the Royal Society of Tasmania 124: 35-50.
- Gressitt, J.L. et al. 1964: Insects of Campbell
Island. Pacific Insects Monograph 7:1-663.
- Gressitt, J.L., & Wise, K.A.J. 1971: Entomology
of the Aucklands and other islands south of New Zealand: Introduction.
Pacific Insects Monograph 27: 1-45.
- Hammond, P.M. 1975: The phylogeny of a remarkable
new genus and species of gymnusine staphylinid (Coleoptera)
from the Auckland Islands. Journal of Entomology (B) 44:
153173.
- Klimaszewski, J. 1979: A revision of the Gymnusini
and Deinopsini of the world (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae, Aleocharinae).
Agriculture Canada Monograph 25: 1169.
- Kuschel, G. 1964: Insects of Campbell Island.
Coleoptera: Curculionidae of the subantarctic islands of New
Zealand. Pacific Insects Monograph 7: 416-493.
- Kuschel, G. 1971: Entomology of the Aucklands
and other islands south of New Zealand. Coleoptera: Curculionidae.
Pacific Insects Monograph 27: 225-259.
- Leschen, R.A.B.; Bullians, M; Michaux, B;
Ahn, K.J. Baeostethus chiltoni, a subantarctic liparocephaline
(Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae): A pangean relic
or recent immigrant? (submitted)
- Marris, J.W.M. 2000: The beetle fauna (Coleoptera)
fauna of the Antipodes Islands,with comments on the impact
of mice; and an annotated checklist of the insect and arachnid
fauna. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 30:
169-195.
- Morrone, J.J. 1998: On Uvardy's Insulantarctica
province: a test from weevils (Coleoptera: Curculionoidea).
Journal of Biogeography 25: 947-955.
- Otte, D.; J. A. Endler (eds). 1989: Speciation
and its consequences. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, MA.
- Wagner, W. L.; Funk, V.A.(eds). 1995: Hawaiian
Biogeography: Evolution on a hot spot archipelago. Smithsonian
Institution Press.
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