Tag Archives: Wairarapa

Native plants for your garden

Titoki, Alectryon excelsus.

Do you live in the Wellington region, want to have native plants in your garden, but don’t know what to choose?

Then the Greater Wellington Regional Council has produced just what you need: the Wellington Regional Native Plant Guide.  I attended the recent launch of the revised 2010 edition.

Wellington Regional Native Plant Guide.

Lists are provided of native plants ideal for 14 different sub-regions, from the southern coasts to the Kapiti dunelands to the northern Wairarapa.

As the guide says:

PLANTS ARE GREAT,

NATIVES ARE BETTER,

ECO-SOURCED IS THE BEST

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 4

Our final collecting day. We packed up and began heading from home.

We spent about an hour alongside the road in the gorge of the Owahanga River. Peter was pleased to add several new mosses, including some that have a liking for calcareous substrates. We were disappointed to find the invasive horsetail Equisetum arvense well established; it had not been previously collected from the area.

Horsetail, Equisetum arvense. Photos by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Locality (including GPS), habitat, and abundance details are recorded for each specimen collected and photographed. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Previous posting on horsetails.

Our final stop was at a covenant in the Waihoki Valley, where we added several forest species not seen on Day 3.

Hinau, Elaeocarpus dentatus. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

After lunch we headed for home. Back at Te Papa and in our specimen preparation room, Carlos and I pressed the day’s collection, and put all of the specimens (c. 400) into our dryer (about 30 degrees celsius). There they will stay for the next week or so, tightly pressed so that they dry flat.

After drying, the specimens are frozen for a week as a quarantine measure before being brought into the main collection area. We don’t want to introduce any herbivorous insects!

Over the coming months, we will confirm identifications, formally accession and database the specimens, secure them with tape onto archival card (for the bigger plants) or house them in archival envelopes (for the mosses and liverworts), and finally file them away in the collection. Eventually you’ll be able to see those with associated photos on Collections Online.

Collections Online specimens from Wairarapa 2009 trip.

Growing Te Papa’s plant collection.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 1.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 2.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 3.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 3

On day three we collected from another QEII National Trust site inland from Akitio. Diverse habitats kept us busy, with the canopy ranging from black beech (Nothofagus solandri) on ridges through hillside tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa) to creek-lined pukatea (Laurelia novae-zelandiae). 

Trunk of large pukatea (Laurelia novae-zelandiae). Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

The divaricating shrub Raukaua anomalus was common at all of the forested sites we visited. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Jean-Claude took photographs of most of the bigger plants that we collected. These will go on Te Papa’s Collections Online website. Photo by Leon Perrie. © Te Papa.

Collections Online specimens from Wairarapa 2009 trip.

Peter and Pat look for mosses on rocks outside the forest. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Back at base, Leon and Barry press the bigger specimens between newspaper and cardboard. Pat, in the background, checks his notes. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Growing Te Papa’s plant collection.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 1.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 2.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 2

Day two comprised a visit to a covenanted reserve on the eastern scarp of the Puketoi Range, arranged by QEII National Trust representative for Tararua, Bill Wallace.

QEII National Trust website.

We collected about 60 species of vascular plants and a similar number of bryophytes (mosses & liverworts).  Amongst our haul was the first confirmed New Zealand specimen of the liverwort Chiloscyphus gippslandicus.

Surveying the terrain at the beginning of the day. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Carlos collecting arboreally, in order to obtain a flowering specimen. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Another specimen being added to the collecting bag. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Craspedia flower head, Nertera, and Euphrasia. Photos by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Mountain cabbage tree, Cordyline indivisa. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Looking eastwood towards the end of the day. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

The bryophyte collectors processing their specimens back at base. Additional lighting is needed to see many of the diagnostic features of these small plants. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Growing Te Papa’s plant collection.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 1.

Botany Fieldtrip Wairarapa 2010: Day 1

This year’s Wairarapa plant collecting trip was to the Pongaroa area.

Day 1 started with packing up Te Papa’s 4WD. Then the long drive to our Akitio accommodation.

Roadside collecting. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

We made a few stops along the way, targeting places that looked to have a diverse array of weeds and/or be promising for mosses.

Weed montage. Photos by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

We followed a colleague’s directions down a backcountry road to see Celmisia spectablis. Celmisia daisies most often grow in alpine conditions, so lowland Wairarapa (altitude = 300m) is an unusual site.

Celmisia spectablis. Too late to catch it flowering. Photo by Jean-Claude Stahl. © Te Papa.

Growing Te Papa’s plant collection.

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