Searches specifically for
G. ithaginis from 1991 to 1994 in the Mokohinau group of islands only found three live beetles on Stack H; nine beetles is the maximum simultaneously observed in recent times. The Mokohinau Islands have been heavily modified by land clearance, burning, grazing, and introduction of the kiore or
Polynesian rat; Lizard Island was briefly colonised by kiore in the late 1970s. Rats were eradicated from all the Mokohinau Islands in the 1990s, but subsequent surveys for
G. ithaginis on Lizard Island have been unsuccessful. Like other
Geodorcus species, this large, slow-moving beetle is protected from collectors under schedule 7 of the
1953 Wildlife Act. Captive breeding and reintroduction to rat-free islands such as Lizard Island was the
Department of Conservation plan for ensuring this species' survival. An expedition in January 2019 thoroughly searched the beetle's habitat on Stack H, another nearby stack, and Lizard Island, and found nothing but fragments of exoskeleton of indeterminate age, and concluded
G. ithaginis may possibly be extinct. == References ==