Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287:reg:3:p128
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287
Segment Type: reg
Provision Reference: reg 3 (pt 128/276)
Character Range: 508530–511738

managed sites on Norfolk Island (ensuring exclusion of rodents and chickens).

Recovery target
The recovery target is shown in Table 41.
Table 41 Recovery target for Advena suteri
EPBC Act status        Estimated population (2023)  Where known populations occur  2034 target
Critically Endangered  350 (1 population)           100% within public reserves    Current population maintained and at least one additional viable population established on Norfolk Island

Relevant literature
DEWHA (Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts) (2008d). Approved Conservation Advice for Mathewsoconcha suteri (a snail). Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Canberra. Accessed 1 February 2024.
Hyman I (2005) Taxonomy, systematic, and evolutionary trends in Helicarionida (Mollusca, Pulmonata). PhD Thesis, University of Sydney.
Hyman I & Köhler F (2020) Report on survey of land snails on Norfolk Island. Australian Museum, Sydney.
Hyman IT, Caiza J & Köhler F (2023) Systematic revision of the microcystid land snails endemic to Norfolk Island (Gastropoda: Stylommatophora) based on comparative morpho-anatomy and mitochondrial phylogenetics. Invertebrate Systematics 37(5–6), 334–443.
Iredale T (1945) The land mollusca of Norfolk Island. Australian Zoologist 11, 46–71.
Ponder WF (1997) Conservation status, threats and habitat requirements of Australian terrestrial and freshwater mollusca. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria 56, 421–430.
Smith BJ (1992) Non-marine Mollusca, in WWK Houston (ed) Zoological Catalogue of Australia Volume 8. Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra.
TSSC (Threatened Species Scientific Committee) (2009d) Commonwealth Listing Advice on Mathewsoconcha suteri. Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Canberra.
Varman RVJ (2015) Norfolk Island Snail Species Collections made between January and March 2015. Unpublished report.
Varman RVJ (2016) Norfolk Island Snail Species Collections made between January and March 2016. Unpublished report.
Varman RVJP (1991) Conchological Survey 1983-90: Manuscript of Land Mollusca Fossiliferous and Present Day. Unpublished manuscript.

Lamprima aenea—Norfolk Island stag beetle/Norfolk Island Christmas beetle

Conservation significance
Endemic to the Norfolk Island Group.
EPBC Act Listing Status: not listed.
Non-statutory Listing Status: Listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List (IUCN 2020).

Description
A large metallic-coloured beetle. Males are typically a bright metallic green with large jaws used for fighting other males and typically measure 26–30 mm long. Females are typically smaller (23–27 mm) and have a bronzish tinge (Reid et al. 2018).

Distribution
Very little is known about the distribution of the Norfolk Island stag beetle (Lamprima aenea). During a recent revision of the genus Lamprima, Reid et al. (2018) reported only 10 specimens amongst the material they examined, only one of which had a specified collection location. However, given the widespread distribution of Lord Howe stag beetle (L. insularis) on Lord Howe Island (Reid et al. 2018), it seems likely that the Norfolk Island stag beetle would have been found across the entirety of