Abstract Seasonal activity and habitat associations of the threatened endemic forest carabid Mecodema howitti Castelnau, and the sympatric but common endemic Megadromus guerinii (Chaudoir), were studied by pitfall trapping in a montane podocarp/hardwood forest remnant on Banks Peninsula, Canterbury, New Zealand. The main surface activity period for adult M. howitti and Mg. guerinii was the austral spring and summer. Megadromus guerinii was active across a wider temperature range than M. howitti, and was less inhibited by rain during the night. Both species were reproductively active in spring and summer, and a teneral Mg. guerinii was recorded in autumn. Mecodema howitti appeared to be randomly distributed and associated with logs. Megadromus guerinii showed spatial clustering, partly due to associations with topography and the proportion of stones in the substrate.
Keywords Mecodema howitti; Megadromus guerinii; Coleoptera; Carabidae; seasonality; activity; habitat; New Zealand
Z03034; Received 4 April 2003; accepted 5 May 2004; Online publication date 24 November 2004
New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 2004, Vol. 31: 305312
03014223/04/31040305 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2004
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