Zecicindela feredayi
Zecicindela feredayi, also known as Fereday's tiger beetle, is a species of tiger beetle endemic to New Zealand. It was first described by Henry Walter Bates in 1867 and its taxonomy was most recently revised in 2013. The species has been suggested to be roughly 5.75 million years old. It can be distinguished from other species in the Zecicindela genus by its uniform dark legs and by the elytra colour pattern. It is widespread throughout most of the country and can primarily be found on sand near rivers. They occur as adults from November to April. Like other tiger beetles, they are predators.
Taxonomy
This species was described as Cicindela feredayi in 1867 by Henry Walter Bates from a single female specimen collected in Christchurch. The type specimen is reported to be stored in the National Museum of Natural History, France, but researchers have been unable to locate it. The specific name refers to the collector of the type specimen, entomologist Richard William Fereday.In 1963, the species was transferred to the newly created Neocicindela, which contained all of New Zealand's tiger beetles. This genus was demoted to subgenus within Cicindela by André Larochelle and Marie-Claude Larivière in 2001 and the species became Cicindela feredayi again. Following a 2011 genetics study, Larochelle and Lariviere created the Zecicindela genus in 2013 and the species became Zecicindela feredayi. The common name of "Fereday's tiger beetle" was also suggested for the species.
Phylogeny
A 2011 study examined the genetic relationships of New Zealand's tiger beetles. The combined sequences of cytochrome oxidase I, cytochrome b and 16S rRNA found that Zecicindela formed a clade that was distinct and separate from Neocicindela. It also found that Z. feredayi was basal to all other Zecicindela except for Z. hamiltoni and Z. tekapoensis. The tree suggested that Z. feredayi diverged from other Zecicindela roughly 5.75 million years ago.Description
Zecicindela feredayi is best distinguished from all other Zecicindela by the dark colouration of the legs and the distinctive colour pattern of the elytra.Adult beetles are in length. The head, antennae, thorax and legs are dark greenish black and covered in white hairs. Like all Zecicindela, the labrum is unidentate. It also has four long setae. The claws of the legs are notably shorter than tarsal segment five.
The abdomen elytra has distinctive clean creamy pale markings on a greenish black somewhat metallic background. The elytra pale marking humeral lunule is well formed and sticks out from the margin. The middle band is angular and complete, reaching close to the apical lunule. The dark areas of the elytra are covered in indistinct small bluish and greenish punctures.