A Pox Upon the Kauri
New Zealanders rally to save their much-loved, 2,000-year-old national symbol
- By Debora Vrana
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Where the fungus came from is a mystery. It was discovered on New Zealand's Great Barrier Island in 1970 but may be a new arrival to the main islands. The nation's wildlife, long protected by sheer isolation, has few natural defenses against predators or contagious diseases that might hitch a ride to the islands on a ship or airplane. The whole country, says Beachman, the conservation official, is "a bio-security nightmare."
And fungi are tough to fight. Peter Maddison, an entomologist and president of the Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society, says one possible approach to stemming the spread of this fungusóremoving dead kauri trees and neighboring debrisóis unlikely to succeed, if only because fungi produce billions of airborne spores. King says he has had some luck spraying infected kauri leaves with phosphoric acid, which seems to delay the growth of the fungus, and suggests spraying New Zealand's trees from airplanes. Meanwhile, he is growing thousands of kauri seedlings in a nursery in the Waipoua Forest that are ready for replanting; other forestry experts plan to take seeds from Tane Mahuta and grow seedlings that will be the core of a new forest.
If there's one thing the kauri tree has taught its passionate admirers, it's to take the long view. The tree, after all, is a survivor. For a species that's been so heavily plundered, says Beachman, "it's been pretty resilient."
Debora Vrana is a freelance writer living in Los Angeles.
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Comments (3)
Kauri Trees are amazing. It could live a thousand years.
Posted by Brad McGill on January 15,2013 | 12:54 AM
Sad to see the kauri trees are dying. they need to be saved. we are regulars at piha it will be a shame to lose them.
Posted by Lou on August 7,2012 | 04:13 PM
Hi my name is taunaha and i am a student at Farm Cove Intermediate in Pakuranga Auckland nz. We have beengiven a project about eco-systems and i choose the coromandel forest park and we have to ask a expert questions about something popular that lives in the forest/eco-system. i really hope u can help and it is fine if u cant. if possible do u know someone that will know the answer if not thats fine as well How tall is the bigget kauri tree in the coromandel forest park? What animals live in the coromandel forest park What is a kauri trees interdependance what adaptations soes it have.
Posted by Taunaha on March 23,2009 | 01:54 AM