Hunting for a threatened forget-me-not in the Rock and Pillar Range

For a few days in mid-January, Curator Botany Heidi Meudt was part of a team that conducted a survey of Myosotis umbrosa, a plant with the same threat status as the kākāpō: Threatened – Nationally Critical. The team spent three days in the Rock and Pillar Range in Otago to get a better understanding of where it is found and how big the population is. Read on to discover how they did this work and what they found.

The side of a mountain and rocky outcrop at sunset.
Beautiful light on the alpine vegetation and tors of the Rock and Pillar Range. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa

What is Myosotis umbrosa?

Myosotis umbrosa is an endemic forget-me-not, known only from the Rock and Pillar Range and nearby Lammerlaw Range, Otago, in the South Island of Aotearoa. Its conservation status is Threatened – Nationally Critical, which is a listing for species that have less than 250 total known individuals or that have more individuals but are in serious decline.

M. umbrosa was described fairly recently (2018) by me, Te Papa Curator Botany Heidi Meudt, and my colleagues, based on a study of the morphological characteristics of the handful of dried, pressed specimens at Te Papa and other New Zealand herbaria. The plant is so newly described and so elusive that there were no observations of it on iNaturalist, and no field images there or on Wikimedia Commons. In fact, I had never even seen live plants of Myosotis umbrosa in the field when we described it!

M. umbrosa is a small, low-growing rosette plant with multiple small, white flowers about 4 mm across, each associated with a small leaf-like bract. It has some hooked hairs on the calyx, and some backwards-facing (retrorse) hairs on the calyx and underside of the rosette leaf, which can help distinguish it from other similar forget-me-nots.

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The start of the survey

So, to get a better idea of exactly how many plants of this threatened species exist and better understand and document it, Department of Conservation (DOC) Technical Advisor Richard Ewans planned a multi-day survey for January 2026. I was invited to join the rest of the Myosotis umbrosa survey team, which also included four current DOC staff (Richard Ewans, Kelli Gerritsen, Connor Durkin, and Theresa Moore) and two ex-DOC botanists (John Barkla and Brian Rance).

I was excited and nervous – this was my first field trip in three years. Would we find Myosotis umbrosa? Could we easily identify it and distinguish it from other, closely-related species in the area? Would we be able to estimate its current population size and describe its microhabitat?

Two people walking up the side of a mountain under heavy clouds.
The team walking toward some tors on the summit ridge, Rock and Pillar Range. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa

On the afternoon of Monday 14 January, we finally got a “weather window” to do the survey, and the team drove up to Big Hut in the Rock and Pillar Range, northwest of Middlemarch, Otago, in DOC four-wheel-drive vehicles. The Rock and Pillar Range reaches 1450 m above sea level and is dotted with hundreds of rocky pillars or “tors” along its summit ridge. These tors were our target habitat for Myosotis umbrosa.

Three people in hiking gear are walking towards rocky outcrops on top of a mountain on a blue-sky day.
The team heading towards some rock tors to look for Myosotis umbrosa. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa
Five people gathered on the deck and surrounds of a hut in the early evening.
Big Hut, our base for the Myosotis survey in the Rock and Pillar Range. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa

After some settling in at Big Hut and a safety briefing, we got straight into our search for forget-me-nots. It didn’t take us too long to find a few individuals of Myosotis umbrosa, and another similar species, M. antarctica subsp. antarctica, in and around the tors. We spent time with hand lenses and rulers to look at their tiny calyces, hairs, flowers and leaf characteristics. The survey was off to a great start – everyone on the team picked up the important characteristics of Myosotis umbrosa, and how to tell it apart from M. antarctica subsp. antarctica.

A close-up of a small plant that has tiny white and yellow flowers and furry green leaves. It is nestled next to a moss and longer grass.
Myosotis antarctica subsp. antarctica in the Rock and Pillar Range – can you distinguish it from Myosotis umbrosa? Photo by John Barkla via iNaturalist

Looking for tiny plants among giant rocks

Full of excitement, confidence and energy, we headed off early on both Tuesday and Wednesday mornings for two big days of surveying the summit ridge for Myosotis umbrosa. Because we had seven people on the team, we could split up into multiple smaller teams and work more efficiently over the large landscape. We had to check each tor we encountered, including all around the base of the rock and inside any crevices and overhangs. When we found a tor that had M. umbrosa, we recorded the habitat, aspect, associated species, exact location (GPS), and number of flowering and non-flowering individuals present.

Two people are lying down on rocks to get under another one to investigate the plants.
Going the extra mile to find, count and photograph the threatened species, Myosotis umbrosa. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa
Four people are standing on different rocks in front of a large dry grassy field.
View from a Myosotis umbrosa site inside one of the tors. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa
A person is crouched down counting plants that are nestled under a rocky outcrop.
Kelli counting Myosotis umbrosa plants beneath a tor and some ferns (Polystichum vestitum). Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa
Two people in high-vis clothing are on a rocky out crop. One person is standing and looking off to the left of the photo and one person is sitting in the foreground looking to their right.
Connor and Theresa continuing the Myosotis umbrosa search on some rocks near a larger tor. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa

All of our findings will be tallied up and summarised in a report that will help DOC to look after this threatened species. Briefly, we ended up finding over 250 plants of M. umbrosa across 25 sitesincluding flowering individuals and seedlings – near multiple tors over an area of several square kilometers. This is a great result, up from just a few recorded sites and individual plants known before the survey. Myosotis umbrosa lives up to its name – umbrosa means “shady” – in that it is always associated with the rock tors, often hiding near the base or underneath overhangs in protected sites.

Another great outcome of the survey is that there are now several iNaturalist observations of the species, images in Wikimedia Commons and more information and photos on the species’ Wikipedia page!

You can see more about this field trip on the Te Papa website. You can also see the iNaturalist observations from this trip of John, Heidi and Brian.

Tiny figures on the top of a craggy mountain with large outcrops and a big sky.
Searching on and around some of the larger tors in the survey area of the Rock and Pillar Range. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa

By the time the next storm was coming through on Wednesday afternoon, we had covered a lot of ground and started our descent back towards Dunedin. Although it was a whirlwind 48 hours in the field, it was a highly fruitful collaboration between young and upcoming botanists at DOC and experienced retired ex-DOC botanists – all with extensive field experience – and me, providing the taxonomic expertise.

The Myosotis umbrosa survey is an excellent example of yet another rewarding DOC and Te Papa collaboration, which was 100% successful in finding and surveying this threatened forget-me-not. DOC plans to continue looking for Myosotis umbrosa across its known distribution, and do similar work for a handful of other Threatened Otago alpine forget-me-nots. For me personally, it was an absolutely joyous return to the field, where I was able to spend time botanising in the high country with other botanists – both old friends and new. I look forward to the next survey!

Six people sitting beside a ute in a large field. They are all having lunch and looking at the camera.
The team taking a well-deserved lunch break! Connor, Brian, John, Kelli, Theresa and Richard. Photo by Heidi Meudt. Te Papa
Five people in different positions on a craggy rock collecting and processing plant specimens.
The team coming together at a Myosotis umbrosa site in the Rock and Pillar Range. Photo by Kelli Gerritsen

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Richard Ewans and DOC for organising the survey and inviting me along, and to all my wonderful colleagues on the survey team: John Barkla, Brian Rance, Theresa Moore, Kelli Gerritsen, and Connor Durkin.

Seven people in hiking and high-vis gear are standing outside in front of a corrugated iron hut that has a sign that says "Big Hut" on the front of it. The sky is very blue.
The January 2026 Myosotis umbrosa survey team outside Big Hut, Rock and Pillar Range: Kelli Gerritsen, Brian Rance, Theresa Moore, John Barkla, Richard Ewans, Heidi Meudt and Connor Durkin. Photo by Kelli Gerritsen

Further reading

Explore more research, articles, and collections of Forget-me-nots (Myosotis)

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