Cicindela albissima (About the EoE)
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Cicindela albissima
Published: May 20, 2014, 10:04 pm
Author: Matthew Pintar
Editorial Review: Lyle Birkey
Editorial Review: Mark McGinley
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Cicindela albissima, commonly called the Coral Pink Sand Dunes tiger beetle, is a species of tiger beetle endemic to Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park in southern Utah, United States. It was originally described by Rumpp in 1962 as the subspecies Cicindela limbata albissima, but mitochondrial DNA, along with the species' morphological and geographical distinctiveness, have shown that it is a separate species. C. albissima can be distinguished from other Cicindela species by its restricted range and lack of pigmentation on its elytra.
Adults
Adults are 10.5 millimeters (0.41 in) to 12 mm long (0.47 in) and 4.4 mm (0.17) to 4.7 (0.19 in) mm wide, while females are generally larger than males. The thorax is brown to bronze in color, while the elytra have reduced pigmentation and are white in color. Adults primarily eat flies and other arthropods found on the dunes. They also scavenge on dead arthropods blown onto the dunes from surrounding habitats.
Adults begin to emerge from the larval stage in March and reach their peak abundance in mid-April to early May. Adult populations decline through June and disappear by July. Mating and egg laying occur from the time adults emerge in mid-March until they die by July. Some adults can be continue to be found from late August to early October.
Adults are usually active on warm or sunny days. They dig burrows that they use at night and during unfavorable weather. Little evidence of parasitism has been observed on both adults and larvae. Throughout their lives, most adults move only small distances, typically less than 300 meters (1000 ft), although some have been observed to move up to 1000 m (3300 ft).
Larvae
After first matings occur in early spring, first instar larvae begin to appear in late spring, usually completing the first instar by late May to June. Most individuals reach second instars by mid summer, and third instars are reached in fall. Larvae hibernate during the winter before emerging as adults the following spring. Larvae are sedentary and live in permanent burrows and feed by using their mandibles to catch arthropods that pass by the mouth of their burrows.
Distribution
Cicindela albissima is endemic to twenty percent of the 1400-hectacre (3500 acres) Coral Pink Sand Dunes, which are within Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park in Kane County, Utah. Its occupied habitat is about 1800 m (5900 ft) long by 300 m (1000 ft) wide. The dunes are about seven miles west of Kanab, Utah, and their southern extent is less than 1.6 km (1 mile) north of the Arizona border.
Conservation
Cicindela albissima has been list as G1, or critically imperiled, because of its extremely limited distribution and low and variable populations. It has been proposed to be listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. It was previously considered a subspecies of Cicindela limbata, but it is over 600 km (370 mi) from any other populations of C. limbata. Its geographic isolation, mitochondrial DNA, and morphological differences, particularly the coloration of the elytra and body size, led it to be considered a distinct species.
In 2012, the population of C. albissima was estimated to be 1786 individuals, up from 1116 in 2011. Since annual population surveys began in 1998, the population reached a peak of 2944 in 2002 and a minimum of 558 in 2005. Rainfall is the primary factor controlling the population of C. albissima, and drought is the most severe threat to the species. Off-road vehicle activity has degraded the beetle's habitat, particularly the interdunal swales, which are the habitat where most larvae are found. Vegetation damaged by off-road vehicles can lead to degraded larval habitat and reduced prey abundance. A 150-hectacre (380 acres) conservation area in which off-road vehicle use is prohibited has been established and covers approximately 80 percent of the beetle's suitable habitat. The conservation area encompassed 87 percent of the beetle's population in 2012, significantly more than in previous years, likely due to the establishment of the conservation area and increased protections within it.
References
Cicindela albissima -Rumpp 1962. NatureServe.
Coral Pink Sand Dunes tiger beetle (Cicindela albissima). U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Knisley, C. Barry and Charles Gowan. (2013). Studies of the Coral Pink Sand Dunes tiger beetle,Cicindela albissima in 2012. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Knisley, C. Barry and James M. Hill. (2001). Biology and conservation of the Coral Pink Sand Dunes tiger beetle,Cicindela limbata albissima Rumpp. Western North American Naturalist 61 (4): 381-394.
Morgan, M.; C. Barry Knisley; and A.P. Volger. (2000). New taxonomic status of the endangered tiger beetle Cicindela limbata albissima (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae): evidence from mtDNA. Annals of the Entomological Socity of America 93 (5): 1108-1115.
Rumpp, N.L. (1962). Three new tiger beetles of the genus Cicindela from southwestern United States (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae). Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Science 60: 165-187.
Spotlight Species Action Plan. (2009). U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Citation
Pintar, M. (2014). Cicindela albissima. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Cicindela_albissima_(About_the_EoE)