logo
Our Changing World: Helping New Zealand's understated orchids

Our Changing World: Helping New Zealand's understated orchids

RNZ News23-04-2025

[picture id="4KDUS48_In_vitro_seedlings_VMeduna_JPG" crop="16x10" layout="thumbnail"]
Photo:
Veronika Meduna
Follow Our Changing World on
Apple
,
Spotify
,
iHeartRadio
or wherever you listen to your podcasts
A tiny population of rare native orchids has received a boost with the first-ever reintroduction of lab-grown seedlings into the wild.
Cooper's orchid - New Zealand's rarest and most elusive native orchid species - spends years growing underground, before emerging as a leafless stick with brown flowers.
This subterranean lifestyle, plus a fussy relationship with fungi, makes conserving these orchids particularly challenging.
With more than 25,000 species worldwide, orchids make up one of the oldest and largest families of flowering plants.
They usually produce colourful and showy flowers, but their seeds are very simple - they contain no food reserves and only sprout if they come in contact with the right fungus.
The Cooper's orchid only emerges briefly every few years to push out a stick with drab looking flowers.
Photo:
Carlos Lehnebach
New Zealand's native orchids are no different when it comes to their dependence on fungi, but they are much more modest, even drab-looking, plants.
Cooper's orchid is a species of potato orchid or
Gastrodia
. This group takes modesty to the extreme. They spend years underground growing as tubers, much like dahlias or kūmara. When they emerge briefly to produce a flower, all you can see is a brown and leafless stick.
Despite their understated looks, New Zealand's less flamboyant orchids caught the attention of botanist Dr Carlos Lehnebach, who moved from Chile to study their ecology.
Carlos, botany curator at Te Papa Tongarewa, scientifically described a new potato orchid species in 2016, naming it after botanist and
orchid lover Dorothy Cooper
.
At the time of its identification, there were only three known populations of Cooper's orchids: two in Nelson and one in the Wairarapa, numbering no more than 250 individuals in total. A handful of observations scattered around the country have since been reported.
Orchid conservation scientists. From left: Jennifer Alderton-Moss, Dr Karin van der Walt and Dr Carlos Lehnebach.
Photo:
Kathy Ombler
In an effort to save the Cooper's orchid, Carlos teamed up with plant conservation researchers Dr Karin van der Walt and Jennifer Alderton-Moss at Ōtari-Wilton's Bush, New Zealand's only botanic gardens dedicated to native plants.
The trio of botanists hoped to sprout Cooper's orchids in the laboratory - a feat far more complicated than tending to many other plants.
Even though the tubers of more common
Gastrodia
species are harvested in some countries for medicinal use and food, there's still a "massive knowledge gap" about their ecology, says Karin.
"The challenge for us when we work with these really rare species is that it's almost like the ambulance is reaching the bottom of the cliff already and we've got this mountain of information to figure out before we can effectively conserve this species or prevent extinction."
In particular, the species' underground lifestyle and mandatory relationship with a very specific type of fungus proved tricky.
This alien looking thing is a Cooper's orchid seedling. Like all orchids, this rare native species needs a fungus to sprout a new seedling and this one was produced in a Petri dish by mixing orchid seeds and different soil fungi.
Photo:
Jennifer Alderton-Moss
It took years to identify the right fungus, extracted from tubers of a much more common potato orchid.
Eventually the team succeeded in developing in vitro techniques to grow enough healthy Cooper's orchid seedling to start returning them back to wild.
The team planted 14 of these seedlings at the Wairarapa site where they first collected seed.
The orchid team is reintroducing Cooper's orchid seedlings they grew in the lab back into the wild.
Photo:
Veronika Meduna
Carlos expects it could be some time before they can tell how well they are doing, but having a method to propagate orchids in the lab provides an insurance policy.
"If something bad happens that wipes out a population, we will have a backup that can help us to reintroduce the species back to the wild."
Sign up to the Our Changing World monthly
newsletter
for episode backstories, science analysis and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two Kiwi students shine in Apple's global coding competition
Two Kiwi students shine in Apple's global coding competition

1News

time28-05-2025

  • 1News

Two Kiwi students shine in Apple's global coding competition

Two 16-year-olds from New Zealand have been named among Apple's Swift coding competition winners for 2025. Alex Liang from Westlake Boys High School and Ben Lawrence from Kaiapoi High School were named among the 350 winning submissions from the tech giant's global competition associated with the Worldwide Developers Conference. Applicants span the globe, representing 38 countries and regions, and incorporating a wide range of tools and technologies. Liang's entry called Make A Wish follows his success last year as the only winner from New Zealand, this time using maths to predict a meteor path, track it in the sky and capture pictures of meteor showers from a phone, rather than a meteor camera. He said he vividly remembered standing outside in May 2021, holding his mother's phone up for three hours and being "very happy and proud of myself" when he finally captured a meteor on camera — but it was time consuming. ADVERTISEMENT "My app is focused on meteors because many people actually try to see meteors and then try to take a picture of it. Right now, the cheapest way to capture a meteor without having to endure it is to use a meteor camera." Alex Liang demonstrates his app to a fellow student. (Source: Supplied) For Liang, it's the second year in a row that he has been named as a winner and he said there had been a "very clear rise" in the number and calibre of applicants this year, and in the use of Artificial Intelligence. "And so this year, unlike last year, I mentioned little planets, which was no AI at all. But this year I did actually implement AI/machine learning in the form of object detection." Liang said he was "not surprised at all" that Apple had decided to allow the use of AI in the competition this year but all usage had to be disclosed. "In fact, I was expecting it. Without AI, many of the things from the app I made would not be possible. "I use it to bump up my efficiency sometimes because I do actually use AI to debug and stuff and then sometimes to create new features or learn new frameworks. But using it does not mean you have to rely entirely on it. ADVERTISEMENT "You have to understand your code top to bottom, every single line, not just saying 'hey GPT do something for me, just write me an app that's doing this'. And AI is not able to create things like that just by saying one word." Liang said planning was already underway for next year's entry, and Make A Wish was being reviewed by Apple to be added to the App Store. "Words cannot describe the experience. I felt like I stepped up to the whole next level of not just astronomy, but innovation. It is something I'm very profound about, something I'm very happy about." Helping money make 'Good Cents' Ben Lawrence pictured using his app, Good Cents. (Source: Supplied) 16-year-old Ben Lawrence from Kaiapoi High School, Christchurch, told 1News he "didn't expect anything" after entering his submission, Good Cents. The app simulates real-world financial scenarios in which users get a job, spend and save money and navigate complex financial curveballs. ADVERTISEMENT 'You do a quiz on some financial questions like 'What is a good way to spend money?' 'How do you save?' 'What's a budget used for?'. 'And based on that, you'll be awarded points, you'll get promotions and the player can also complete lessons that will teach you certain elements and aspects and then I'll quiz you on it to make sure you've actually read through it." Throughout the game, Lawrence gave examples of "random events" players could encounter designed to test whether they will spend money or not. "Oh, the new iPhone came out. You know you already have one, but you want the new one. Do you want to do it, or should you save your money? That kind of thing." Ben Lawrence's app, 'Good Cents'. (Source: Supplied) "Or if your savings are low but you have tonnes of money in your spending [the app] might say, 'hey do you want to put some money into your savings, get some interest on it?'." Lawrence said learning money skills in class could be "pretty boring" and hoped his app could be a way to make learning finances more fun. ADVERTISEMENT "Just making learning more fun and then also helping people with skills better pretty darn important and going into adulthood." The app took him three months to develop, and he hoped to launch it on the App Store soon. 'But I'm working on kind of upgrading it, almost making it so it's more of a platform so schools can sign up to it, license it, whatever and you can have classrooms and teachers can assign work to students and certain aspects of it. 'Phones are banned in schools so that's a huge problem, but I'm working on making it so that they can do it through a website now as well.' An idea that could go 'global' Denis Vida, Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Western University in Ontario Canada, runs a project called the Global Meteor Network (GMN), which has over 1400 meteor cameras globally across 42 countries. Liang said he was collaborating the organisation with the goal of sharing his app with the global astronomy community. ADVERTISEMENT Adjunct Research Professor at the University of Western Ontario. (Source: Supplied) "Essentially everyone can follow a simple set of instructions and buy very reasonably low-cost hardware and install a meteor camera, then install our open-source software and contribute to the project," Vida said. He said "you don't really need to know much about space or science" to do so. "We have a lot of participants in New Zealand who are farmers with no previous context or interest in astronomy, but when they heard about potential meteor fall in their area they got in touch to get a camera installed." He said Liang reached out to him as one of New Zealand's "strong, well-organised" group of space enthusiasts, and was excited to collaborate with him on a project to solve a common problem. Vida said the main issue they faced was that people may be told when a meteor event could happen in their area, but won't know where exactly to look or which way to point their phone in the sky. "Most of the time when people do it, they hold their phone up, they wait for the right time, and it turns out they were looking the completely wrong direction. Or they'll swing the phone and then the only thing they have in the frame is just the fireball with no other reference points. ADVERTISEMENT "The problem is if we want to make measurements in that, we can't use it. There needs to be stars, it needs to be static or have some kind of reference points." He said developing an app to solve this problem sounded like the perfect project for programming pro Liang. "So the idea was let's build an app or some service that people can install where every time something like that happens within a certain radius of you, you'll get a notification and a set of instructions of how to start calibration and the sorts of images to take." Vida said now that Liang had created the app, the next step was getting it installed on a lot of phones, to get other meteor agencies on board. "Once we know that, you know things are going to happen and then people are going to install it, they're going to take pictures with the app and then once we show results that's where the app is going to get more established or where people are going to get more recognised." He said with some more rigorous testing and development of some features, Liang's app would have the potential to have an "oversized impact" globally. "Impacts of little asteroids happen all over the world in a random way. So something's on the App Store and anyone can download it, that's literally [going to] go global." ADVERTISEMENT "These challenges are a great way to find talent. You have pretty small investment and you set some sort of a goal, and you find talented people who are inspired by it," he said.

Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale
Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale

Scoop

time22-05-2025

  • Scoop

Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale

Article – RNZ It made international headlines last year. What does a scientific dissection of the world's rarest whale involve? , for Our Changing World The spade-toothed whale: deep diving, rare, and largely unknown to science – until now. The elusive species, part of the beaked whale family, grabbed worldwide headlines in 2024: first when it washed ashore 30 minutes south of Dunedin in July, then again five months later when it was dissected. In December 2024, Our Changing World joined the research team during their week-long scientific dissection efforts to find out what secrets the whale holds. Rare and elusive Beaked whales are some of the most elusive marine mammals on the planet because they are so incredibly well adapted to their long-deep-diving lifestyle. Satellite tagging studies of Cuvier's (or goose-beaked) whales have revealed extraordinary feats of physiology. This includes one dive that lasted a mindboggling 222 minutes – that's longer than the runtime of The Return of the King, the third (and longest) Lord of the Rings movie. Another dive reached a depth of almost three kilometres. Average dives lasted about one hour – impressive breath-holding for an air-breathing mammal. As for the spade-toothed whale's diving prowess – well, nobody knows. It's never been seen alive in the wild. 'I can't tell you how extraordinary it is for me personally' Anton van Helden helped give the whale its common name – spade-toothed – because the single tusk-like tooth erupting from the lower jaw of males looks like a whaling tool called a spade. Anton, senior science advisor in the marine species team at the Department of Conservation, had described the outer appearance of the whale from photographs taken of a mother and calf that washed up in the Bay of Plenty in 2010. They were originally mis-identified and buried, before DNA analysis confirmed that they were spade-toothed whales, after which their partial skeletons were exhumed. This meant that when Anton was sent some snaps of the whale that washed up in Otago in July 2024 he knew exactly what he was looking at, and what a rare find it was. The 2024 specimen is only the seventh ever found (with all but one from New Zealand). Hence the hum of excitement in the concrete room at AgResearch's Invermay campus in Mosgiel, just south of Dunedin. For the first time ever, scientists got the chance to dissect an intact spade-toothed whale. New finds: nine stomachs and tiny teeth The week begins with photographs and whole-body measurements, followed by cutting into and peeling back the thick layer of blubber. Once the blubber is removed, individual muscles are identified and documented. The massive backstrap muscle across the length of the body is then removed, exposing the organs below. These are photographed, examined and weighed. Each beaked whale species seems to have a unique stomach plan. This dissection revealed that the spade-toothed whale has nine stomachs. Squid beaks and eye lenses were found inside, along with some parasites that are now at the University of Otago, awaiting identification. During the week the intact head was removed and brought to the onsite CT scanner. The tens of thousands of images that come out of the scan, along with the subsequent head dissection, will help the researchers dig into some of the many questions they have around the whale's evolution, how they make and use sound, and how they feed. For example, tiny vestigial teeth were found in the jawbone of this whale – a throwback to their early evolutionary days when they had more teeth. Now they have evolved to be suction feeders, using sound to echolocate their prey and then employing their piston-like tongue to alter the water pressure and suck them in. While the focus was scientific dissection, rather than autopsy, the team did find bruising around the neck and head, and a broken jawbone, indicating that the whale had suffered some head trauma that was likely the cause of death. A collaborative effort, and a reconnection A large team participated in the whale's recovery and dissection: Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou hapū members and rangatahi, staff from Tūhura Otago Museum, local and international whale scientists, University of Otago staff and scientists, Māori whale experts (tohunga), and staff from the Department of Conservation. Experts from both knowledge systems – mātauranga Māori and western science – worked alongside each other, with learning going both ways, says Tumai Cassidy from Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou. He was excited to learn from Ngātiwai tohunga Hori Parata and his son Te Kaurinui who answered Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou's call to assist with the dissection. The whale was named Ōnumia by the rūnanga, after the te reo Māori name for the native reserve stretch of coastline it was found on. The whale's skeleton has been gifted to Tūhura Otago Museum, but it will be a while before it will go on display. Right now, the bones are in Lyttelton in the care of Judith Streat. Three months in bacteria-filled baths have stripped the bones of flesh, but there is a lot of oil in deep-diving whales, so the process will take several more years. The kauae, or jawbone, will stay with Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou, says Rachel Wesley. 'Being able to claim the kauae, you know, as mana whenua, under our rakatirataka and in line with old practices from the past has been a huge step forward from what our hapū has been able to do in the past.' A 3D-printed version of the jawbone will complete the skeleton in the museum.

Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale
Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale

Scoop

time22-05-2025

  • Scoop

Our Changing World: Dissecting The World's Rarest Whale

The spade-toothed whale: deep diving, rare, and largely unknown to science - until now. The elusive species, part of the beaked whale family, grabbed worldwide headlines in 2024: first when it washed ashore 30 minutes south of Dunedin in July, then again five months later when it was dissected. In December 2024, Our Changing World joined the research team during their week-long scientific dissection efforts to find out what secrets the whale holds. Rare and elusive Beaked whales are some of the most elusive marine mammals on the planet because they are so incredibly well adapted to their long-deep-diving lifestyle. Satellite tagging studies of Cuvier's (or goose-beaked) whales have revealed extraordinary feats of physiology. This includes one dive that lasted a mindboggling 222 minutes - that's longer than the runtime of The Return of the King, the third (and longest) Lord of the Rings movie. Another dive reached a depth of almost three kilometres. Average dives lasted about one hour - impressive breath-holding for an air-breathing mammal. As for the spade-toothed whale's diving prowess - well, nobody knows. It's never been seen alive in the wild. 'I can't tell you how extraordinary it is for me personally' Anton van Helden helped give the whale its common name - spade-toothed - because the single tusk-like tooth erupting from the lower jaw of males looks like a whaling tool called a spade. Anton, senior science advisor in the marine species team at the Department of Conservation, had described the outer appearance of the whale from photographs taken of a mother and calf that washed up in the Bay of Plenty in 2010. They were originally mis-identified and buried, before DNA analysis confirmed that they were spade-toothed whales, after which their partial skeletons were exhumed. This meant that when Anton was sent some snaps of the whale that washed up in Otago in July 2024 he knew exactly what he was looking at, and what a rare find it was. The 2024 specimen is only the seventh ever found (with all but one from New Zealand). Hence the hum of excitement in the concrete room at AgResearch's Invermay campus in Mosgiel, just south of Dunedin. For the first time ever, scientists got the chance to dissect an intact spade-toothed whale. New finds: nine stomachs and tiny teeth The week begins with photographs and whole-body measurements, followed by cutting into and peeling back the thick layer of blubber. Once the blubber is removed, individual muscles are identified and documented. The massive backstrap muscle across the length of the body is then removed, exposing the organs below. These are photographed, examined and weighed. Each beaked whale species seems to have a unique stomach plan. This dissection revealed that the spade-toothed whale has nine stomachs. Squid beaks and eye lenses were found inside, along with some parasites that are now at the University of Otago, awaiting identification. During the week the intact head was removed and brought to the onsite CT scanner. The tens of thousands of images that come out of the scan, along with the subsequent head dissection, will help the researchers dig into some of the many questions they have around the whale's evolution, how they make and use sound, and how they feed. For example, tiny vestigial teeth were found in the jawbone of this whale - a throwback to their early evolutionary days when they had more teeth. Now they have evolved to be suction feeders, using sound to echolocate their prey and then employing their piston-like tongue to alter the water pressure and suck them in. While the focus was scientific dissection, rather than autopsy, the team did find bruising around the neck and head, and a broken jawbone, indicating that the whale had suffered some head trauma that was likely the cause of death. A collaborative effort, and a reconnection A large team participated in the whale's recovery and dissection: Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou hapū members and rangatahi, staff from Tūhura Otago Museum, local and international whale scientists, University of Otago staff and scientists, Māori whale experts (tohunga), and staff from the Department of Conservation. Experts from both knowledge systems - mātauranga Māori and western science - worked alongside each other, with learning going both ways, says Tumai Cassidy from Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou. He was excited to learn from Ngātiwai tohunga Hori Parata and his son Te Kaurinui who answered Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou's call to assist with the dissection. The whale was named Ōnumia by the rūnanga, after the te reo Māori name for the native reserve stretch of coastline it was found on. The whale's skeleton has been gifted to Tūhura Otago Museum, but it will be a while before it will go on display. Right now, the bones are in Lyttelton in the care of Judith Streat. Three months in bacteria-filled baths have stripped the bones of flesh, but there is a lot of oil in deep-diving whales, so the process will take several more years. The kauae, or jawbone, will stay with Te Rūnanga o Ōtākou, says Rachel Wesley. "Being able to claim the kauae, you know, as mana whenua, under our rakatirataka and in line with old practices from the past has been a huge step forward from what our hapū has been able to do in the past." A 3D-printed version of the jawbone will complete the skeleton in the museum.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store