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PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana By: K. Gargurevich & K. McNulty

PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

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PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana. By: K. Gargurevich & K. McNulty. TAXONOMY. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Insecta Order: Coleptera Family: Cicindelidae Genus: Cicindela Species: puritana. Protected Status. Under the U.S. Endangered Species Act - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

PURITAN TIGER BEETLECicindela puritana By: K. Gargurevich & K. McNulty

Page 2: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: Arthropoda Class: InsectaOrder: ColepteraFamily: Cicindelidae Genus: CicindelaSpecies: puritana

TAXONOMY

Page 3: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

Protected StatusUnder the U.S. Endangered Species Act

Listed as a federally threatened species for its entire range

Connecticut, Maryland and Massachusetts statutesListed as an endangered species for local

conditions

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How they got their namePuritan tiger beetle

(Cicindela puritana), PTB.

Tiger beetles are named for their ferocious hunting behavior: they spot their prey with their large eyes, and sprint to catch it, like tigers.

‘Puritan’ is in honor of their discovery in Massachusetts, and for the way they seem to prey.

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Natural History• They are cold-blooded, terrestrial,

invertebrate arthropods. Their size ranges from 12mm. to 14mm (0.5

inch mean size). They have a brown thorax and head with

areas of dark greens, browns and bronzes. They have patterned elytra, which are

leathery wing covers that protect their wings located beneath.

The patterns on these covers are white and symmetrical with a line running parallel to the pincers.

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Natural History Continued…Their large eyes help them spot their prey. Then they move quickly to capture their prey,

running after the prey on long slender legs. They are ferocious hunters with a voracious

appetite.

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Speed• Aggressive and highly skilled predators -

pound for pound, PTB have been clocked as the fastest animal on earth.

If they were the size of a horse they would reach speeds of 200 to 300 miles per hour.

In fact, they can run so fast when they hunt that they are unable to process the incoming visual input, becoming temporarily blind, so they must stop to reorient themselves if they miss their target.

Page 8: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

Adult Hunting TechniquePTB go through bursts of foraging activity,

alternating with long periods of standing still.When these speedy animals capture their

prey, they grab it with their long, sword like mandibles, crush and tear the insect apart, and then spit up their saliva, which digests their prey even before they suck it up as a gooey stew.

The PTB is carnivorous and at least a third level consumer.

Their diet consists mainly of small insects, flies and ants.

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Predators

• Dragonflies and robber flies may eat adults. Flies and wasps threaten the larva by laying

parasitic eggs in larval burrows. If the fly and wasp eggs survive, the wasp

larva attach themselves to the beetle larva and eat them alive.

The parasitoid eggs, if successful, will hatch into larvae that attach to the back of the tiger beetle larva and eat it alive, eventually emerging from the burrow as an adult wasp or fly.

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Life Cycle

The PTB leads a life of remarkable contrasts. The Puritan tiger beetle’s life cycle is 2 years

long.  They spend about 96% of these 2 years as a

larva.They are larva for 22 months spending much

of their lives buried in the sand.The beetles go from eggs to larva and then

molt several times to pupa, finally becoming adults.

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Life Cycle Continued…During the summer months adults are active.

The adults emerge anytime from late June to early August.

This leaves them very little time as adults and little time to mate.

Mating occurs in the warm summer months, and egg laying occurs in mid August.

The females place their eggs one by one just underneath the top layer of sand and then die.

Page 12: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

ReproductionFemales have been observed placing their

eggs singly, just below the surface of the sand among scattered plants.

The females’ choice of location for depositing their eggs is very particular, based on the characteristics of the sandy soil. If the local conditions aren’t suitable for the females’ needs, the population may abandon a potential habitat site.

Page 13: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

The LarvaeAfter about a week, the eggs hatch into

larvae about one-third of an inch long. The larvae dig a burrow an inch or two deep

in the sand.After 2 to 4 weeks, the larvae molt into a

slightly larger second stage, which dig deeper burrows, about 1.5 to 2 feet.

By late October, these second-stage larvae close their burrows for the first of their two winter hibernations.

Page 14: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

The Larvae continued…In April or early May of the next spring, they

open their holes and are active for a month or two, then close their burrows again until early September, when they molt to the third and final larval stage.

These larvae remain active until late fall when they close their burrows for their second winter.

The following spring, they are active until about June, when they pupate and transform into adults.

The adult beetles then emerge from their burrows and begin the cycle again.

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The Larvae continued…PTB larvae are sit

and wait predators,They wait in

burrows for prey to approach within a few inches of the opening,

Once in range, the larvae strike with lightning speed to seize their prey and drag it inside.

PTB larva in burrow (larva pic)

Page 16: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

HABITAT PTB require sand and clay deposits, formed

by glacial lakes during the Pleistocene. These deposits are found along the Atlantic coastal plain.

This beetle requires sandy beaches along both fresh and brackish water such as rivers, streams and estuaries.

The beaches, often located at bends in the river, are generally dry, wide, and free of vegetation.

Reproductive females are instrumental in choosing habitat based on geological characteristics of potential sites for depositing their eggs.

Page 17: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

Habitat continued…These beaches are also where the tiger

beetle’s prey are found.

It depends on areas which are disturbed enough to remain relatively open and free of plant cover, but not so disturbed that they wash away.

Their habitat can be covered by floods in almost any month of the year.

Page 18: PURITAN TIGER BEETLE Cicindela puritana

RangeThe PTB’s distribution follows the sand and

clay deposits formed by glaciers during the last ice age.

One area is along the Connecticut River, in New England, and the other along the Chesapeake Bay, in Maryland.

In the Connecticut River Valley, the species distribution follows the sand and clay deposits formed by glacial lakes during the last ice age.

The 600 mile gap between the two populations is thought to be the result of harsh local conditions that existed during the Pleistocene.

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Calvert Cliffs, Maryland

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Chesapeake Bay PopulationsThese two populations are 110 km apart on

opposite sides of the bay.These two populations were separated more

47.5 million years ago.The distribution of the PTB along the western

shore of the Chesapeake Bay spans about 40 km.

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Listed: 8/7/1990 ThreatenedStatus since listing: Declined

Chesapeake Bay PopulationPeak abundance in

the early to mid 90s and lowest around 2005.

The numbers have increased since 2005 but are still well below peak abundance.

There are large year-to-year fluctuations, but the larger pattern is downward

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The New England PopulationThey inhabit the beaches along the

Connecticut River in Connecticut and Massachusetts.

The PTB was collected in several towns from Middletown to the Massachusetts border in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Presently, they are found at a single cluster of 3 small sites.

The total population in New England is less than 1,000; more than 99 percent of the remaining New England population is found only in Connecticut.

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Connecticut River Range

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Connecticut River Population

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Reason for DeclinePTB populations are limited by the

availability of sandy beach habitat along rivers, which tends to occur below large river bends.

Some sites have been lost due to bank stabilization around cities and by habitat loss due to flooding behind dams.

They are also threatened due to heavy recreational use.

Adult PTB are most active on the beach at the same time as people are.

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What can you do?Plants and animals that live on beaches are

under great pressure from development and recreation. Remember that the beach you are on may be some creature's living room--tread softly and treat it with respect.

Much of what we know about the PTB is from volunteers who have recently helped with monitoring and translocating larvae. Protecting biodiversity requires everyone’s help.

Learn about threats to this and other species. Today’s students are tomorrow’s teachers and scientists.

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Sources Babione, Michelle “Bringing Tiger beetles Together” Endangered Species Bulletin

Jan-Feb 2003 p28 “Beetle” The World Book Encyclopedia vol. 4 Chicago World Book inc. 2003 p214-217 “Federally Endangered or Threatened Species” march 5 2007 U.S. fish and wildlife

3.6.07. http://www.fws.gov/r5soc/EndThrSp.htm Jenner, Jan. Science Explorer; Animals. Needham Massachusetts: Prentice Hall Inc,

2002 “Puritan Tiger Beetle” Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection last

update unknown 3.13.07 http://ct.gov/dep/cwp/view.asp?a=2723&q=326064&depNav_GID=1655

“Tiger Beetles of the United States” 8.16.06 U.S. Department of the Interior/U.S. Geological Survey 3.1.07 http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/distr/insects/tigb/usa/71.htm

White, Richard. Beetles Of North America / Text And Illustrations Norwalk: Houghton Mifflin Company 1963

Wirthy, Chris “Species Cicindela puritana-Puritan Tiger Beetle” 1.6.06 Iowa State University Entomology 3.1.07 http://www.bugguide.net/node/veiw/40408

http://fourriverscharter.org/projects/2007%20Watershed%20Wildlife%20CD/Animal%20Pages/Puritan_Tiger_beetle.htm

State of Connecticut; Department of Environmental Protection. Accessed at  http://www.ct.gov/dep/cwp/view.asp?A=2723&Q=326064 on 2/6/11.

Larva pic. http://www.flickr.com/photos/odephoto/page116/. Accessed 2011 January 28.

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