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The classic New Zealand identification
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The Reed Field Guide to New
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J.T. Salmon

Which Native Plant Can I Grow
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Andrew Crowe

100 Best NZ Native Plants for
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Pohutukawa Diana Adams Art Print
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Mahoe whitey wood.
Melicytus ramiflorus
A member of the violet family. A shrub or small tree to
10m. White splotchty bark. Oblong leaves 5-14cm lomg. A violet blue berry
4-6mm diameter
A common shrub or small tree. Melicytus are
dioecious. (Seperate male and female plants). Female plants need to
be sourced to gather seed. Mahoe is insect pollinated with
midges, gnats, hover flies, butterflies, bees and ants all seen visiting
the flowers and presumably being involved with pollination. The fruits are
fleshy berries that turn purple when ripe. The Pigeon,Tui,
Whitehead, South Island Robin and silver eye have been observed
eating the berries. Two interesting features of
the New Zealand flora are that many plants have
small, inconspicuous, unspecialised flowers that lack bright colours and many
plants are dioecious, with unisexual flowers.Mahoe flowers exhibits both these
characteristics.

The species name ramiflorus refers to The flowers being
borne on branches
Melicytus ramiflorus flowers in a series of distinct
flushes from November through to March. These flowering episodes occur on
the same branch. The intensity of flowering varies from year to year and
between episodes.These flowering episodes seem to extend the time for
which berries are ripe and increase reproductive fitness. In a varying
environment, spreading an activity out over an extended period of time may
be a risk averting strategy. The flowers are a prized food of the
opposum. Ripe berries are present from mid summer to Autumn.The
episodic nature of flowering means a large number of berries are available
over a long length of time. The berries are clustered together on the
branches and are readily accessible to foraging birds and
animals. The seeds of Mahoe possess a
chemical germination inhibitor. The seeds will not germinate until this
brown coloured exudate is removed. Once the exudate is leached away and is
replaced by fresh water, the germination of Mahoe is rapid. This
inhibitor may function in two ways; as an inhibitor of Mahoe germination
and as an inhibitor of other species which grow with and could compete
with Mahoe.

The white sploches on Mahoe bark and serrated margin of
leaves

Berries which hold up to 10 seed
Maui
fetched fire from the mahoe tree on Three kings Islands and
brought it to the mainland, having first fished up the giant stingray that
was the Northisland of
New Zealand and
muriwhenua the tail.
The
tribes of Muriwhenua: their origins & stories
Dorothy Urlich Cloher
Auckland university
Mahoe was one of the woods maori would utilise to
create fire.
Fire
The
Maori made his fire by friction, and used te hika ahi, the fire plough, to
get his fire.two pieces of wood which had been thoroughly dried were used.
One , the kauahi, or lower stick, a piece of Mahoe (Melicytus
ramiflorus), was generally 14 to 18 inches long, 2 or 3 inches
wide, and 1 to 2 inches thick. This was very soft wood, and the stick
could be used on both sides. Pate (Schifflera digitata) was sometimes used
as a kauahi, but Mahoe was much preferred.the other piece of wood used was
te hika, the rubbing stick, made from Kaikomako, (Pennantia corymbosa), a
very hard compact and durable wood. The stick was scraped down with tuhua
(obsidian) or shell, to a rounded point or end.
Te Hika
also means “generating stick”, and a man and woman would both take part in
generating fire, as both took part in the generation of children. The
kauahi or lower stick was kept in position by the woman, while the man
worked on the hika, or the generating stick. A small log is placed on the
ground, with the lower stick against it. The lower end of the kauahi is
held firmly in position by the woman, who stands with her feet on it, and
the man kneels at the other end, which is raised up 5 or 6 inches from the
ground. He holds te hika firmly, with his thumbs underneath, and his
fingers placed flat on the outer part, with his right hand passing over
his left. He begins rubbing the lower stick until a groove is formed about
5 inches long. The rubbing is slow at first , then a little quicker, with
heavier pressure, until a hollow, a1/4 to1/2 inch deep, is formed, and a
minute heap of dust begins to collect at the lower end of the groove. When
plenty of dust has been made, the man uses te hika again, working it back
and forwards more vigorously and with greater pressure, and the hollow
gets hotter. He knows by the smell when the fire will come. The hollow
gets darker, and from the heap of dust comes a little smoke, then a little
bright spec in the middle.” A kua ka tea hi” the fire has come to
life.
Makareti
Maggie Papakura: The old time Maori
1938
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The
timber of Mahoe.
Melicytus micranthus
Unlike the other melicytus with small leaves and
divaricating habit.

Melicytus macrophyllus
Leaves 7-16cm long and thick
er and
glossier.. Local in its distribution, common in the North. Violet
blue-black berries sparsely on the stems.


I recommend the following books on New Zealand
native plants 100 Best NZ Native Plants for Gardens The Reed Field Guide to New Zealand Native Trees Trees and Shrubs of New Zealand Gardener's Encyclopaedia of NZ Native Plants A Photographic Guide to Ferns of New Zealand New Zealand Trees and Shrubs: A
Comprehensive Guide to Cultivation and Identification From Weta to Kauri: A Guide to the NZ Forest Which Native Forest Plant? (Which S.) |