Tag Archives: Victoria

Australian cousins

During my recent visit to Victoria’s Alpine National Park in Australia, I was interested to see a number of familiar plants amongst the unfamiliar gum trees.

Searching Victoria’s Alpine National Park for Asplenium hookerianum.

Do you recognise any of these?

1. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

2. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

3. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

4. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

5. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

A harder one to finish off.

6. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Answers:

1. Acaena novae-zelandiae, bidibidi, piripiri.  A species indigenous to both Australia and New Zealand.

2. Coprosma hirtella.  An endemic Australian species, but similar to those in New Zealand.

3. Aciphylla, speargrass (actually in the carrot family).

4. Scleranthus.  Popularly cultivated as a “moss hummock”, but actually a flowering plant.

5. Blechnum fluviatile, creek fern.  Looks a bit different to New Zealand plants. 

6. Derwentia.  A relative of New Zealand’s Hebe (note the similar leaf arrangement).  Now both regarded as constituents of a broad Veronica.

Identifying Asplenium hookerianum in Victoria

From our search in Victoria’s Alpine National Park, we suspect the rare Asplenium hookerianum (Hooker’s spleenwort) is actually much more common there than previously recognised. But more searching is needed to confirm this. 

Searching for Asplenium hookerianum in Victoria’s Alpine National Park. 

Asplenium hookerianum can be distinguished from the other ferns it occurs with in Victoria by its being fertile at a small size (c. 5 cm), with linear reproductive structures, and fronds that are twice divided with rounded frond segments. 

Small plants of Asplenium flabellifolium (necklace spleenwort) can resemble Asplenium hookerianum. However, the latter has bi-pinnate (twice divided) fronds, discernible at the base of even small fronds. 

A small frond of Asplenium hookerianum (Hooker’s spleenwort), Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Asplenium flabellifolium (necklace spleenwort), Armidale, NSW, Australia. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Asplenium hookerianum (left top and middle) and Asplenium flabellifolium, Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

 Polystichum proliferum (mother shield fern) and Cystopteris tasmanica (bladder fern) have frond segments with pointed apices and round rather than linear reproductive structures. Further, Polystichum proliferum usually does not become fertile until a size bigger than Asplenium hookerianum

Polystichum proliferum (mother shield fern), Toolangi, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie. © Leon Perrie, Wellington.

 Asplenium gracillimum (a hen & chickens fern) also usually does not become fertile until a size bigger than Asplenium hookerianum. The latter also differs in its frond segments being more stalked. 

Asplenium gracillimum (a hen & chickens fern), Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Searching for a rare Australian fern

While visiting family in Melbourne, I took the opportunity to go fern hunting.

Asplenium hookerianum (Hooker’s spleenwort), Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Asplenium hookerianum is a rare fern in Australia.  With Melbourne University’s Daniel Ohlsen and Mike Bayly, we went searching for the two populations recorded from Victoria’s Alpine National Park. 

How to recognise Asplenium hookerianum in Victoria.

We were successful, relocating the known populations and finding a new one.  We recorded a total of 450-500 individuals, some 200 more than previously noted.

In Victoria, Asplenium hookerianum appears restricted to rock overhangs in deep gorges.  It was odd seeing it in Eucalyptus forest.  In New Zealand, Asplenium hookerianum is much less fussy, being common on the forest floor. 

Lara, pointing to Asplenium hookerianum on this rock wall, and Daniel. Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

Asplenium hookerianum habitat (at the bottom of this gorge), Alpine National Park, Victoria. Photo by Leon Perrie, Curator. © Museum of New Zealand.

We wonder whether the Australian populations are derived from New Zealand, or vice versa.  We hope to test this using DNA analyses.

Findings from our previous investigations of New Zealand Asplenium hookerianum:

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