18-05-2025
Rare parasitic plant rediscovered near Wellington
Te pua o te Rēinga clusters discovered by a Greater Wellington contractor in the Wainuiomata Water Collection Area.
Photo:
Greater Wellington
A parasitic plant endemic to Aotearoa has been rediscovered near Wainuiomata after wild populations of the species were thought to be extinct in the region.
In the Wellington region
Te pua o te Rēinga
, also known as wood rose or Dactylanthus taylorii, is listed as critical on the threatened list.
Greater Wellington regional council said the plant's
seeds were translocated
from the King Country to the Wellington region in 2020, but the last documented observation of a wild Te pua o te Rēinga population was in the Kaitoke area in 1914.
Greater Wellington ecosystems and community manager and Rōpū Tiaki co-chair David Boone said a bird specialist working on behalf of Greater Wellington was not looking for the plant, but stumbled across several clusters in an area closed off from the public.
The contractor in the Wainuiomata Water Collection Area was surveying a bird count station when they unexpectedly spotted the plants, he said.
"The plants were not found in a healthy condition - more like relics of a remnant population - further monitoring is needed to understand the size and health of the population, and what we can do to preserve it," he said in a statement.
"The forest in the Wainuiomata water collection area is largely unchanged since Europeans arrived in New Zealand and includes the largest and most pristine lowland forest in the lower North Island. It is a habitat for native bird species like tītipounamu (rifleman) and kiwi, and now one of New Zealand's rarest plants."
A Te pua o te Rēinga tuber.
Photo:
Greater Wellington
Department of Conservation operations manager and an expert on Te pua o te Rēinga, Avi Holzapfel, said this was the southernmost known population of the plant in New Zealand.
The plants can live for decades or even longer, she said.
"Initial indications are this is a remnant population of mature plants which may have been at the site for a long time - right under our noses," Holzapfel said in a statement.
"Protecting the plants from predators like possums and rats will hopefully allow the plants to seed, which may be replanted to rejuvenate the population."
The surrounding forest also needed to be protected given that the plant was fully dependent on host trees, she said.
Te pua o te Rēinga male and female flowers.
Photo:
Nga Manu Nature Reserve / David Mudge
Short-tailed bats, pekapeka, are a known pollinator of Te pua o te Rēinga.
In early 2024 Greater Wellington council detected a new population of lesser short-tailed bats along the nearby Pākuratahi River.
"As short-tailed bats can range over 40km during a single night's feeding, it is quite possible that bats have visited, fed on, and pollinated the newly discovered population in the past, and hopefully will do so again," Holzapfel said.
The working group responsible for translocating Te pua o te Rēinga seeds to Zealandia and Ōtari-Wilton's bush in 2020 has reconvened to work with councils and the Department of Conservation to develop a co-management plan for the re-discovered wild population.
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