Shrubby Tororaro
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''Muehlenbeckia astonii'' or shrubby tororaro is an endemic New Zealand
shrub A shrub (often also called a bush) is a small-to-medium-sized perennial woody plant. Unlike herbaceous plants, shrubs have persistent woody stems above the ground. Shrubs can be either deciduous or evergreen. They are distinguished from trees ...
in the family Polygonaceae. It has distinctive small heart-shaped deciduous leaves amidst a tangle of wiry interlocking branches. Although common in cultivation around the world, it is extremely rare and threatened in the wild.


Taxonomy

''Muehlenbeckia astonii'' was described by Donald Petrie in 1911, and named ''Muehlenbecki Astoni'' after Bernard Aston, who collected the specimens in Palliser Bay at the mouth of the Wainuiomata River in 1908. The type specimen is in
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is New Zealand's national museum and is located in Wellington. ''Te Papa Tongarewa'' translates literally to "container of treasures" or in full "container of treasured things and people that spring fr ...
, Wellington.


Etymology

The name "shrubby tororaro" distinguishes it from the similar species tororaro (''
Muehlenbeckia complexa ''Muehlenbeckia complexa'', commonly known as ''pohuehue'' ( mi, pōhuehue), although this name also applies to some other climbers such as ''Muehlenbeckia australis''. Description ''Muehlenbeckia complexa'' is one of 50 species of shrubs, that ...
''), a scrambling plant with no trunk. It sometimes goes by the names wiggy-wig bush,According to Given (2001), this name was coined by Marlborough farmer Ted Reynolds in 1996 referring to an igloo-like plant on his property. zig zag plant, wirebrush, shrubby pōhuehue, or mingimingi (a generic term for many small-leaved shrubs).


Distribution

This species was probably once widely distributed in the drier lowland and coastal parts of eastern New Zealand, especially on terraced riverbeds, possibly as far south as the Waitaki Valley, South Canterbury. Its former range is hard to determine, as the species was only recognised by botanists decades after most of New Zealand's dry scrublands had been cleared for agriculture. Its deep root system helps it survive in dry conditions, and can grow on open rocky hillsides and stony ground, up to altitude. It prefers free-draining, warm, sunny slopes, on moderately- to highly-fertile soil. Today ''M. astonii'' is only found in four areas: # Around Palliser Bay at the southern tip of the
North Island The North Island, also officially named Te Ika-a-Māui, is one of the two main islands of New Zealand, separated from the larger but much less populous South Island by the Cook Strait. The island's area is , making it the world's 14th-largest ...
, from Honeycomb Light south to Sinclair Head. # Northeastern Marlborough, currently only from the lower Awatere Valley, the Blind River,
Clifford Bay Clifford Bay is a bay in the northeast of the South Island of New Zealand, in the Marlborough Region. It lies between Cloudy Bay to the northwest, and Cape Campbell. The bay's most notable feature is the solar salt extraction works at Lake Grassm ...
, and
Cape Campbell Cape Campbell, ''Te Karaka'' in the Māori language, is in Marlborough, New Zealand, on the northeastern coast of the South Island. It lies at the southern end of Clifford Bay, northeast of Ward, and southeast of Blenheim. Cape Campbell lies ...
. # Some sites in North Canterbury discovered in the 1950s and 1960s: Balmoral,
Weka Pass Weka Pass is a locality in the northern Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island between the towns of Waipara and Waikari. The Waipara River cut the Weka Pass by wearing down the soft limestone and mudstone in the area. Erosion has create ...
, Waikari Stream, Waiau, and along the Waipara River. #
Kaitorete Spit Kaitorete Spit is a long finger of land which extends along the coast of Canterbury in the South Island of New Zealand. It runs west from Banks Peninsula for 25 kilometres, and separates the shallow Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora from the Pacific O ...
at
Lake Ellesmere Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora is a broad, shallow coastal lake or waituna, in the Canterbury region of the South Island of New Zealand. It is directly to the west of Banks Peninsula, separated from the Pacific Ocean by the long, narrow, sandy K ...
(containing 90% of the world population), and Birdling's Flat and Lake Forsyth at the southwestern edge of
Banks Peninsula Banks Peninsula is a peninsula of volcanic origin on the east coast of the South Island of New Zealand. It has an area of approximately and encompasses two large harbours and many smaller bays and coves. The South Island's largest cit ...
.


Description

Shrubby tororaro has very small leaves (only wide) on a brown stalk, growing in clusters of two to three (sometimes five), or alternating along the longer branchlets. The leaves are usually dented at the tip and heart-shaped. They are bright green above and pale below. Unlike most New Zealand plants ''M. astonii'' is leafless in winter. It grows from a distinct trunk, and has many fine reddish brown to orange flexible branches that zigzag around one another to form a dense, interwoven ball, generally around, and sometimes 4 × 4 metres. Older plants have stems like canes growing from the interior. Plants have been recorded living for over 80 years. Its flowers, appearing December to January, are tiny and grow in clusters of two to four, less than in diameter, and are greenish to white or pinkish white. The plant is gynodioecious: individuals have either female flowers or what have been described as 'inconstant male' hermaphrodites. 'Inconstant males' can self-fertilise, but their seeds have less than 5% viability. Isolated female plants produce infertile fruits, or hybridise with other ''Muehlenbeckia'' species nearby. Fruits appear in October to June. The seed is a dark three-sided nut, about long, dull not glossy (which distinguishes it from the scrub pōhuehue or torararo, '' M. complexa''). The seed is surrounded by the remnants of the tepals, which swell into a white fruit in just 10–15 days. These fruits are sugary and edible, eaten by birds and lizards (which disperse the seeds), and by mice (which pulverise and kill the seed). Seeds can persist for up to four years in the soil. The plant is an important host for several endemic moth species, and in some cases their sole host. File:Muehlenbeckia astonii kz5.jpg, ''M. astoniis distinctive interlaced branches and heart-shaped leaves File:Muehlenbeckia astonii fruit and seed.jpg, One mature fruit and seed at bottom, and an immature seed (recently pollinated flower) above. File:Flowers of m. astonii.jpg, The flowers of ''M. astonii'' are inconspicuous, being pale and only 3 mm across.


Cultivation

''M. astonii'' is usually deciduous, though retains some leaves when grown in northern New Zealand. It prefers dry conditions, and is very drought-tolerant – excessive moisture can lead to root rot. Its unusual form and wiry orange stems make it an interesting garden plant. It tolerates light shade, but grows well as a shelter plant in exposed situations, tolerating salt spray, wind, and frost. It can be planted as an informal hedge, and responds well to being pruned into shape. If planted in rich soil, ''M. astonii'' can grow vigorously upwards and may require staking. It can be propagated by winter hardwood cuttings, which strike best in early spring, and grows well from outcrossed seed. The translucent fruits are considered decorative, so most plants sold in nurseries are female. At a time when only 48 ''M. astonii'' were known to be growing wild in the Wellington area, the city councils of the Hutt Valley and Wellington began propagating plants from the wild and successfully growing males and females close together in traffic islands, each representing a different wild population, where they could pollinate each other. Traffic island populations were used as a stock to propagate 1500 plants from cuttings, and these were subsequently planted in Turakirae Reserve where the species once occurred.


Conservation

''M. astonii'' is now rare in the wild. In most of the sites it is known from there are only 1–3 old plants, and almost no seedlings: male and female flowers occur on separate plants and need to cross-pollinate, so isolated individuals cannot reproduce. Several small populations show no out-crossing because males and females are too far apart. Most of the population (2,500 of 2,800) occur on private land at
Kaitorete Spit Kaitorete Spit is a long finger of land which extends along the coast of Canterbury in the South Island of New Zealand. It runs west from Banks Peninsula for 25 kilometres, and separates the shallow Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora from the Pacific O ...
south of
Lake Ellesmere Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora is a broad, shallow coastal lake or waituna, in the Canterbury region of the South Island of New Zealand. It is directly to the west of Banks Peninsula, separated from the Pacific Ocean by the long, narrow, sandy K ...
, and even at Kaitorete there are very few young plants. Most wild populations are unlikely to recover without active management. Originally ''M. astonii'' would have grown in the dry scrub habitat known as "grey scrub", in association with grasses or sedges and small-leaved shrubs such as ''
Rubus squarrosus Bush lawyer is a common name of a group of climbing blackberry plants (subgenus ''Micranthobatus'' of the genus ''Rubus'') that are found in New Zealand, many of them rampant forest vines. There are five native species of bush lawyer in New Zea ...
'' (leafless lawyer), '' Olearia solandri'' (coastal tree daisy), and ''Discaria toumatou'' (
matagouri ''Discaria toumatou'', commonly called matagouri, tūmatakuru or wild Irishman, is a tangle-branched thorny plant endemic to New Zealand. Matagouri is a tangle-branched, extremely thorny, divaricating shrub or small tree up to five metres t ...
). These habitats were some of the first in New Zealand to be cleared for agriculture during colonisation, and so most individual ''M. astonii'' now are surviving in heavily-modified open grassland. Plants suffer from trampling and browsing by livestock and other introduced mammals such as
rabbits Rabbits, also known as bunnies or bunny rabbits, are small mammals in the family Leporidae (which also contains the hares) of the order Lagomorpha (which also contains the pikas). ''Oryctolagus cuniculus'' includes the European rabbit specie ...
, hares, and possums, and seedlings are eaten by slugs and snails. Some plants have been seen succumbing to scale insects and fungal disease. Plants also have to compete with introduced grasses which smother them as seedlings, and with introduced shrubs such as boxthorn ('' Lycium ferocissimum''). Open agricultural land is a poor habitat for shrubby tororaro, but is suitable for the other scrambling and climbing members of the genus (''M. complexa'' and ''M. australis'') which both compete with and hybridise with ''M. astonii''. This species was not recognised as endangered in the wild until the 1980s, and a recovery plan was created in 2000. Its conservation status in 2004 was "Nationally Vulnerable", revised in 2009 to "Nationally Endangered". Representatives from all remnant populations of ''M. astonii'' have been propagated in large numbers, for both restoration planting on protected land, including Mana Island, and for gardens and urban planting projects. Three wild populations (at Cape Campbell, Balmoral Conservation Area, and Kaitorete Scientific Reserve) have legal protection and are undergoing restoration. Once threats are removed, wild populations of ''M. astonii'' appear to respond rapidly, so there is an excellent chance that this endangered species will recover. In 2018 a farmer destroyed about one third of Kaitorete spit's ''M. astonii'' plants by spraying and cultivating three paddocks to plant oats.


Notes


References


External links


Type specimens of ''M. astonii''
in the collection of the
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is New Zealand's national museum and is located in Wellington. ''Te Papa Tongarewa'' translates literally to "container of treasures" or in full "container of treasured things and people that spring fr ...
*''M. astonii'' discussed on
RNZ Radio New Zealand ( mi, Te Reo Irirangi o Aotearoa), commonly known as Radio NZ or simply RNZ, is a New Zealand public-service radio broadcaster and Crown entity that was established under the Radio New Zealand Act 1995. It operates news and cu ...
''Critter of the Week''
13 April 2018
{{Authority control astonii Flora of New Zealand Endangered flora of New Zealand Garden plants Plants described in 1911