This species is only found on the two small predator-free islands of
Mangere and
Rangatira; it may exist on other smaller rock stacks that have coxella. Its host plant,
A. dieffenbachii, is similarly rare, mostly found on Mangere, though some exists on Rangatira, and those parts of Pitt and main Chatham Island where livestock have not eaten it. Because it has such a small range and is dependent on a single host plant species,
H. spinipennis is classified as Nationally Vulnerable by the
Department of Conservation. With only two known populations, conservation of
H. spinipennis will depend on establishing a third population, by creating
Aciphylla patches in an area free of livestock and ideally without cats, mice, or
weka. ==References==