New Zealand Journal of Botany abstract
B97048Received 10 July 1997; accepted 8 December 1997
Establishment patterns and host tree preferences of the emergent hemi-epiphytic
tree Metrosideros robusta in northern New Zealand
P. I. KNIGHTBRIDGE *
J. OGDEN
School of Environmental and Marine Science, and School of Biological
Sciences
The University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland, New Zealand
* Present address: Landcare Research, Private Bag 11052, Palmerston North, New
Zealand.
Abstract The relative importance of terrestrial and epiphytic
establishment of the emergent tree
Metrosideros robusta (Myrtaceae)
and its host tree species and sizes, were surveyed in seven different
forest types with different disturbance histories in northern New Zealand. At
two disturbed sites,
M. robusta established terrestrially. At less
disturbed sites, most
M. robusta were hemi-epiphytic, but terrestrially
established individuals had colonised occasional canopy gaps.
M. robusta
occurred more commonly on large host trees (>50 cm diameter) than
either relative density or relative basal area of host trees would predict,
suggesting that large trees are intrinsically better places to establish and
not just bigger targets.
M. robusta grew on 20 of the 42 tree species
sampled.
Vitex lucens, dead trees, and the podocarps
Dacrydium
cupressinum,
Dacrycarpus dacrydioides, and
Prumnopitys
ferruginea were more common as hosts than their relative densities
predicted at all sites where they were present. Other host species such as
Podocarpus hallii and
Laurelia novae-zelandiae were "preferred"
at some sites, but not at others.
M. robusta tended to establish in
different sites on different host tree species. Hauturu (Little Barrier
Island), where the Australian brushtail possum (
Trichosurus vulpecula)
has never been present, had the highest number of saplings and fewest dead
M. robusta, suggesting that this introduced browser is changing the size
structure of mainland New Zealand
M. robusta populations.
Keywords New Zealand; hemi-epiphyte; strangler;
Metrosideros robusta; host preference; establishment; disturbance;
brushtail possum; Trichosurus vulpecula
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