Rare native mistletoe blooming on Hutt tracks
Rare native mistletoe blooming on Hutt tracks
Rare native mistletoe (Peraxilla tetrapetala), known as beech mistletoe, has been spotted lately on a number of tracks in Kaitoke Regional Park and Pakuratahi Forest.
“We are seeing more and more beech mistletoe blooms each year, which we believe is largely due to our possum control work in the area,” says Barrett Pistoll, Senior Monitoring Environmental Officer at Greater Wellington Regional Council.
“The best way to spot them is to look for a carpet of red petals on the ground. If you do, be sure to look up – they often grow quite high up.”
The Beech mistletoes are now becoming quite rare in New Zealand’s forests, especially in the North Island. This is mainly due to forest clearance, invasive predators, and the decline in native bird species that act as pollinators and seed-dispersers.
“Possums love to browse the fleshy leaves of these species. The presence of mistletoes still in our regional parks is a testament to our ongoing pest control efforts and forest management practices.”
Mistletoe is a famously romantic plant. According to Norse mythology, when the god Odin’s son Baldur was prophesied to die, his mother Frigg, the goddess of love, went to all the animals and plants of the natural world and asked them to promise not to harm him. But Frigg neglected to consult with the unassuming mistletoe, so the god Loki made an arrow from the plant, which was used to kill Baldur. According to happier versions of the myth, the gods were able to resurrect Baldur from the dead. Frigg declared mistletoe a symbol of love and promised a kiss to all who passed beneath it.
“This is the perfect time of year for a romantic stroll in the bush,” says Mr Pistoll. “We encourage people to visit the area and enjoy these rare and beautiful flowers.”
Beech mistletoe has been monitored by members of Upper Hutt Forest and Bird for more than 10 years.
Some key facts about beech mistletoe:
The beech mistletoes in New Zealand are quite unique
worldwide as they have a strong mutual relationship with
their avian pollinators.
• Unlike some
mistletoe species found in other countries, New Zealand
mistletoes usually do not harm their hosts.
•
Beech mistletoes are some of the few plants in the world
with ‘explosive’ flowers. To be pollinated, these
flowers must be twisted open by native birds such as tui and
bellbirds. When twisted, the flower petals of the ripe buds
spring open and spray the bird with pollen. This pollen can
then be transferred to the next flower the bird visits,
which allows that mistletoe plant to produce seeds.
Amazingly, a tiny native bee only one-quarter the size of a
red mistletoe bud can also pollinate this plant by twisting
open flowers. No other plant in the world is known to have
this unusual pollination system!
• Beech
mistletoes provide native birds with a very important source
of fruit and nectar, which are otherwise scarce in beech
forests. Two of the beech mistletoes have bright red flowers
that appear around Christmas time and are often mistaken for
rata.
• Beech mistletoes and native birds have
developed a mutualism, which is a specialised relationship
that benefits both species. Birds rely on the mistletoes for
fruit and nectar, and mistletoes depend on birds for
pollination and seed dispersal. This mutualism may be
evolutionarily dangerous, because if either species declines
then the other is in trouble.