Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
On the distribution of tree weta in the North Island, New
Zealand.
Steven A. Trewick* & Mary
Morgan-Richards*[[daggerdbl]]
The distribution in the North Island of three species of tree weta
(
Hemideina thoracica,
H. crassidens and
H. trewicki) is
described from field surveys. The two most widespread species (
H.
thoracica and
H. crassidens) were generally parapatric but the
boundary between the two was rather complex with a number of disjunctions. Most
notable were the relict populations of
H. crassidens isolated on Mt
Ruapehu (39deg.17[[minute]]S) and Mt Taranaki (39deg.17[[minute]]S). The main
boundary between these two species crosses the North Island at approximately
40deg. 20[[minute]] S. A recently described species (
H. trewicki), found
only in the Hawkes Bay region, is sympatric with
H. thoracica over much
of its range. These weta probably developed into separate species after they
became isolated by geophysical processes, and their subsequent distribution has
been the result of recent climate-related dispersal.
Keywords: Hemideina; tree weta; distribution; North Island;
biogeography; stenopelmatidae
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 25, Number 4, December 1995, pp 485-493
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (713K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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