An Isolated Occurrence of Pyractomena ecostata (LeConte)
(Coleoptera: Lampyridae) in the Mid-Atlantic with New Records
from New Jersey and Delaware
Christopher M. Heckscher and James E. Lloyd
Northeastern Naturalist, Volume 22, Issue 4 (2015): N35–N38
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N35
2015 Northeastern Naturalist Notes Vol. 22, No. 4
C.M. Heckscher and J.E. Lloyd
An Isolated Occurrence of Pyractomena ecostata (LeConte)
(Coleoptera: Lampyridae) in the Mid-Atlantic with New Records
from New Jersey and Delaware
Christopher M. Heckscher1,* and James E. Lloyd2
Abstract - Pyractomena ecostata is an uncommon firefly primarily associated with brackish tidal
marshes of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of Florida. A geographically isolated occurrence is known
from coastal southern New Jersey. Herein, we report 2 unpublished locality records from Kent
County, DE, that expands the range of the Mid-Atlantic population into the Delaware Bay Estuary. We
also report a previously unpublished modern-day record from Cape May County, NJ, perhaps the first
New Jersey specimen secured since 1898. These data bring the total known number of Mid-Atlantic
collection sites to 6. Although the species is very rare in the Mid-Atlantic, the disjunct population
remains extant and therefore should be considered a significant inventory and conservation target
due to impending sea-level rise and the spread of the invasive Phragmites australis (Common Reed).
The Lampyridae genus Pyractomena is widespread in North America east of the Rocky
Mountains (Green 1957). However, most species are considered uncommon, and this once
thriving genus may be in serious decline. Pyractomena ecostata (LeConte) is a large lowflying
species that periodically emits brilliant, explosive “firecracker”-like flashes, which
appear yellow and are ~1 sec in duration, as it moves slowly over wetlands. Despite its seemingly
conspicuous nature, very little has been published regarding this spectacular firefly.
The known distribution of P. ecostata is remarkable because published locations include
2 very disparate regions: Florida and southern New Jersey (Green 1957). Most unusual is
that the Mid-Atlantic population is disjunct across nearly contiguous and seemingly uniform
habitat (coastal tidal salt and brackish marshes) without any obvious geographical barrier.
The noteworthy nature of this distribution was remarked upon by Green (1957) in his landmark
treatment of the genus. Green (1957) clearly considered the >1360-km hiatus between
the two population centers as plausible and stated that the species is found “… occurring
in Florida and southern New Jersey, and apparently not in any intervening territory.” The
Florida distribution includes counties on both the east and west coastline—the northernmost
Atlantic coastal records of that southern population come from Volusia County (Green
1957; J.E. Lloyd, unpubl. data). The New Jersey distribution appears to be far more restricted
geographically as the species has only been reported from along the Atlantic coastline in
Cape May and Atlantic counties in the extreme southern portion of the state (Green 1957,
Wenzel 1896). Thus, considering the conspicuous nature of this firefly and the fact the geographic
hiatus has persisted to the present day, the disjunct distribution, apparent to Green
in 1957, must be considered an accurate representation of the species’ occupied range. From
a conservation perspective, an isolated occurrence in the Mid-Atlantic region should garner
considerable attention. Our objective here is to report new distribution records from the
Mid-Atlantic and to bring awareness to conservationists and land managers regarding
the species’ disjunct range, rarity, and status in the states of New Jersey and Delaware.
1NOAA Environmental Cooperative Science Center, Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources,
Delaware State University, 1200 N. DuPont Highway, Dover, DE 19901. 2Entomology and
Nematology Department, University of Florida, PO Box 110620, Gainesville, FL 32611-0620. *Corresponding
author - checkscher@desu.edu.
Manuscript Editor: Marc Branham
Notes of the Northeastern Naturalist, Issue 22/4, 2015
2015 Northeastern Naturalist Notes Vol. 22, No. 4
N36
C.M. Heckscher and J.E. Lloyd
There are 3 historic collection sites known to us from New Jersey (Table 1). Below, we
present details regarding 4 unpublished modern-day records of individuals collected from
the Mid-Atlantic population, 3 of which extend the range of the species into the Delaware
Bay Estuary. The first individual represents a Delaware state record and was collected in
1972. The latter 2 Delaware specimens were collected together at an additional location 40
years later. A fourth record is from 1992 from Cape May County, NJ, and is significant in
that it may be the first collection from New Jersey since 4 July 1898 (J.E. Lloyd, unpubl.
data), a period of 94 years. Figure 1 presents a geographic representation of all known collection
locations from the Mid-Atlantic region.
DELAWARE: (1) Kent County, Woodland Beach, 3 – VIII – 1972, collector: T. Rogers
(specimen retained by collector; DET J.E. Lloyd); (2 and 3) Kent County, both
collected from high brackish marsh dominated by Spartina alterniflora Loisel (Saltmarsh
Cordgrass) adjacent to Bennett’s Pier Road, 2 – VII – 2012, collector: C.M.
Heckscher (in private collection of C.M. Heckscher at Delaware State University).
NEW JERSEY: (4) Cape May County, collected from a causeway in brackish tidal
marsh at Sea Isle City, 14 – VI – 1992, collector: J.E. Lloyd (in private collection of
J.E. Lloyd at University of Florida).
Green (1957) noted that P. ecostata is associated with brackish tidal marshes. The 4 new
locality records reported above corroborate that conclusion for the Mid-Atlantic population.
However, in Florida the species occasionally has been observed in low , wet pastures along
highways apparently apart from brackish influence (J.E. Lloyd, u npubl. data).
At projected rates of sea-level rise, 99% of salt and brackish tidal marshes in the
Mid-Atlantic states may be severely altered ecologically or destroyed by the year 2100
(Delaware Sea-level Rise Vulnerability Assessment 2012). Therefore, the association of
this species with brackish tidal marshes indicates P. ecostata is likely threatened by sealevel
rise, especially in the Mid-Atlantic where it maintains a geographically isolated
and restricted coastal range. The spread of the invasive Phragmites australis (Cav) Trin
ex Steud. (Common Reed) has severely altered tidal coastal marshes of the Mid-Atlantic
states in part by reducing biological diversity, altering ecological community structure and
function, and affecting overall biomass (Chambers et al. 1999). The loss of tidal marsh
biodiversity due to P. australis invasion, including its effect on arthropods, is a primary
concern in the Mid-Atlantic states (e.g., Chambers et al. 1999, Gratton and Denno 2005,
Table 1. All known records of Pyractomena ecostata (LeConte) from New Jersey and Delaware with
associated best source. Fourteen specimens collected in the months of July and August and reported by
Wenzel (1896) and Green (1957) are in the American Museum of Natural History and the New Jersey
State Museum collections, including some labeled as collected by R.P. Dow and C. Palm. For details
regarding the recent records, see text.
Location Best references
Historical records
Anglesea, Cape May County, NJ Green 1957, Wenzel 1896
Five Mile Beach, Cape May County, NJ Green 1957
Linwood, Atlantic County, NJ Green 1957
Recent records
Woodland Beach, Kent County, DE T. Rogers collection (collected in 1972)
Sea Isle City, Cape May County, NJ J.E. Lloyd collection (collected in 1992)
Bennett’s Pier, Kent County, DE C.M. Heckscher collection (collected in 2012)
N37
2015 Northeastern Naturalist Notes Vol. 22, No. 4
C.M. Heckscher and J.E. Lloyd
Figure 1. A geographic
representation of all
known collection sites
of Pyractomena ecostata
(LeConte) in the Mid-
Atlantic region: (1) Linwood,
Atlantic County,
NJ; (2) Sea Isle City,
Cape May County, NJ;
(3) Anglesea, Cape May
County, NJ; (4) Five
Mile Beach, Cape May
County, NJ; (5) Woodland
Beach, Kent County,
DE; (6) Bennett’s
Pier, Kent County, DE.
This restricted Mid-
Atlantic occurrence is
disjunct from Volusia
County, FL.
Havens et al. 1997). Therefore, this widespread invasive wetland species may threaten the
persistence of P. ecostata populations in New Jersey and Delaware by altering the ecological
quality of coastal marshes.
Despite the collection of just 4 individuals since 1898, the isolated Mid-Atlantic population
of P. ecostata remains extant, albeit rare. We suspect the species occurs in low numbers
at widely scattered locations in the broad salt and brackish high marshes of the southern
New Jersey Atlantic coast and lower Delaware Estuary. This species is showy and could
not be easily overlooked. Therefore, based on available data, we follow Green (1957) in
accepting this occurrence as disjunct from Volusia County, FL, the next-closest known
collection site. The occurrence of an isolated and restricted Mid-Atlantic population is significant.
Because of its presumed vulnerability to sea-level rise and the invasive P. australis,
populations of this stunning firefly should be considered an important target for protection,
inventory, and monitoring in New Jersey and Delaware.
Acknowledgments. Lori Lester assisted in the creation of Figure 1. Some limited funding
was provided by the NOAA Environmental Cooperative Science Center at Delaware
State University (NOAA-EPP Award NA11SEC4810001).
2015 Northeastern Naturalist Notes Vol. 22, No. 4
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C.M. Heckscher and J.E. Lloyd
Literature Cited
Chambers, R.M., L.A. Meyerson, and K. Saltonstall. 1999. Expansion of Phragmites australis into
tidal wetlands of North America. Aquatic Botany 64:261–273.
Delaware Sea-level Rise Vulnerability Assessment. 2012. Preparing for tomorrow’s high tide. Delaware
Coastal Program, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Dover, DE.
Gratton, C., and R.F. Denno. 2005. Restoration of Arthropod assemblages in a Spartina salt marsh
following removal of the invasive plant Phragmites australis. Restoration Ecology 13:358–372.
Green, J.W. 1957. Revision of the Nearctic species of Pyractomena (Coleoptera: Lampyridae). The
Wasman Journal of Biology 15:237–284.
Havens, K.J., W.I. Priest III, and H. Berquist. 1997. Investigation and long-term monitoring of
Phragmites australis within Virginia’s constructed wetland sites. Environmental Management
21:599–605.
Wenzel, H.W. 1896. Notes on the Lampyridae, with the description of a female and larva. Entomological
News 7:294–296.