Wood rose (New Zealand)

Wood rose (New Zealand)

Taxobox
name = Woodrose
status = EN
regnum = Plantae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Magnoliopsida
ordo = Santalales
familia = Balanophoraceae
genus = "Dactylanthus"
species = "D. taylorii"
binomial = "Dactylanthus taylorii"

The wood rose, "Dactylanthus taylorii", is a fully parasitic plant that grows on the roots of certain trees in New Zealand. The host tree responds to the presence of "Dactylanthus" by forming a burl-like structure that resembles a fluted wooden rose (hence the common name). Māori names for wood rose are "pua o te reinga" or "pua reinga", "flower of the underworld" and "waewae atua", "feet of gods". It is the only species in the "Dactylanthus" genus. One of its most common host trees is pate or seven-finger ("Schefflera digitata").

Plants are either male or female. They flower between January and April and are primarily pollinated by the native New Zealand Lesser Short-tailed Bat. Introduced mice and rats also pollinate them although rats tend to destroy them. Fruits about 2 mm long are produced from February to MayFact|date=June 2007. The plant has no green leaves, and roots are also absent, the plant being connected to the host by its stem. Some plants have been aged in excess of 30 years oldFact|date=June 2007. It prefers damp but not waterlogged soil, and is often found at the head of small streams. It tends to live under dense canopies of tall trees but some specimens may be found at forest borders.

The plant is cryptic, and hence hard to survey, but there are unlikely to be more than a few thousand in existence. Most of these are in the North Island, including Northland, Coromandel Peninsula, East Coast and central regions, but there are a few on Hauturu/Little Barrier Island. It is likely that many sites are known only to collectors, as the woody growth has commercial value.

The wood rose is under threat from harvesting by collectors, browsing by possums, rats, pigs and deer, habitat loss, and the rarity of its pollinators and seed dispersers.

"Dactylanthus" is regarded, as of 2004, as a 'Category A' threatened species. The New Zealand Department of Conservation started a recovery plan in 1995. Protection measures include pest control and enclosure of the plants in cages.

External links

* [http://www.doc.govt.nz/templates/podcover.aspx?id=33587 Department of Conservation] - wood rose information.
*cite web | url = http://www.doc.govt.nz/upload/documents/science-and-technical/tsrp56.pdf | title = "Dactylanthus taylorii" recovery plan 2004–2014. (Threatened Species Recovery Plan 56) | year = 2005 | publisher = Department of Conservation, Wellington, New Zealand | accessdate = 2007-09-05


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