Dracophyllum Traversii
Similar to some other Dracophyllum species, it has a candelabra-shaped canopy; long, thin, green leaves; and a prominent pyramid-shaped inflorescence. It has tiny red flowers, between 500 and 3000 on each panicle, and equally tiny reddish-brown dry fruit. D. traversii inhabits a variety of forest and shrubland types, from lowland to subalpine, in gorges, on cliffs, and on mountainsides. It has a range that stretches from Waima forest at the top of New Zealand's North Island, down to Otago and Fiordland in the South Island.
It was first described by Joseph Dalton Hooker in 1867, and was placed by Walter Oliver in the subgenus Dracophyllum in 1928. A cladistic analysis using genetic sequencing was published in 2010, revealing that D. traversii was indeed related to D. latifolium as Oliver had thought. The status of D. pyramidale as a synonym is disputed by taxonomic institutions and botanists, with Plants of the World Online not recognising the positions of the New Zealand Organism Register, New Zealand Plant Conversation Network, and various New Zealand botanists.
Description
Dracophyllum traversii is a shrub or tree that grows to a height of 0.2–13 m (0.7–42.7 ft) tall, though those growing in exposed subalpine areas often do not reach 1 m (3.3 ft). Similar to D. elegantissimum, it forms a candelabra-like canopy with its branches, which have flaky light brown bark. Its leaves, which concentrate at the ends of branches like species in the family Bromeliaceae, are 9–86 by 1.7–5 cm (3.5–33.9 by 0.7–2.0 in), leathery, and very finely toothed such that there are 18 to 20 teeth every 10 mm (0.4 in). Plants which grow at the upper reaches of the tree line have a grey wax on their leaves, as well as change colour during Winter from green to a reddish-purple, as a result of anthocyanins.
It flowers from October to February with densely-packed 18–40 cm (7.1–15.7 in) long panicle (branched inflorescence), though those growing in full sun may be shorter, producing 500–3000 or more red (though sometimes green) flowers on each. The panicle has a central axis 1.3–1.65 cm (0.51–0.65 in) in diameter with 3–6 cm (1.2–2.4 in) branches at right angles. It is covered in inflorescence bracts (modified leaves) which are 130–240 by 25–50 mm (5.12–9.45 by 0.98–1.97 in) and light green with a white colour at their base and pink at the tip. Its flowers are recaulescent and suspended off of tiny 4.0–4.8 by 0.5–0.7 mm bracteoles and 0.5–2.0 mm long hairy pedicels.
The sepals are a red (sometimes green) colour, egg-shaped, and 1.2–3.0 by 1.1–2.5 mm, which is the same length as the corolla tube. The corolla (petals) itself is red, though the 2.7–3.0 by 4–5 mm bell-shaped tube is occasionally white. Its lobes are reflexed and are 2.5–2.8 by 2.0–2.5 mm. The stamens occur at the top of the corolla tube and consist of a 1.8–2.0 mm long pink (becoming yellow) oblong anther suspended off of a 1.0–1.5 mm long filament. It has a 1.4–1.5 by 1.8–2.0 mm hairless, almost globe-shaped, ovary and 1.0–1.5 by 1.0–1.5 nectary scales. The stigmas are five-lobed and have 2–3 mm long styles.
It fruits from December to May producing yellow-brown coloured 0.95–1 mm long egg-shaped seeds. Surrounding the seeds are red to purple-brown 1.9–2.0 by 2.8–3.0 mm hairless fruit. D. traversii is morphologically very similar to D. latifolium, but differs by its more robust growth habit and leaf and flower characteristics. Its leaves are serrulate as opposed to the serrate leaves of D. latifolium, and it has larger, hairless, sepals, as well as a longer and wider corolla tube and globe-shaped ovary. Its seeds are also much smaller than that of D. latifolium.
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Flowering inflorescence
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The very small individual flowers
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The flaky bark on the trunk
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A fruited inflorescence
Taxonomy
Cladogram showing the phylogeny of selected species within the genus Dracophyllum, from research published in 2010.
Subgenus Oreothamnus Subgenus Dracophyllum
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D. traversii was first described by Joseph Dalton Hooker in 1867, in his Handbook of New Zealand Flora. He described it as "Much the largest species of the genus," and designated the type specimen as one he and J. Haast had collected 914 m (3000 ft) above sea level on the Arthur's pass in the province of Nelson, 1865. The New Zealand Plant Conservation Network regards Dracophyllum pyramidale, a similar plant first described by W. R. B. Oliver in 1952, as a synonym of D. traversii. Anthony Peter Druce first merged the two species in an unpublished check-list in 1980. Plants of the World Online, however, regards them as separate species, D. traversii occurring in the South Island and D. pyramidale in the North Island. One 1987 study on the flora of north-west Nelson claimed the only visible difference between D. traversii and D. pyramidale was a wax on the surface of the leaves of D. traversii. Stephanus Venter revised the genus in 2021, maintaining the synonymy of D. pyramidale, citing the 1994 "Trees and Shrubs of New Zealand," and describing the latter as simply a more robust form of D. traversii, with a lower altitude habitat and sheaths and inflorescences of varying lengths.
Etymology
Dracophyllum means 'dragon leaf', drawing from its similarity to the Dragon Tree from the Canary Islands. The specific epithet traversii refers to William Thomas Locke Travers, a New Zealand lawyer, politician, explorer, and naturalist who lived in New Zealand from 1849. He conducted a study of the flora of the Nelson, Marlborough, and Canterbury regions.
Classification and evolution
D. traversii's placement within the genus Dracophyllum was first attempted by Walter Oliver in a 1928 article of the Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand. Later, in 1952, he revised his work in a supplement, placing it in the subgenus Dracophyllum (referred to as Eudracophyllum) and in a group with D. latifolium, though basing his research purely on morphological characteristics. In 2010 several botanists published an article on the genus Dracophyllum in the Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. In it they performed a cladistic analysis and produced a phylogenetic tree of the tribe Richeeae and other species using genetic sequencing. They found that only the subgenus Oreothamnus and the tribe Richeeae were monophyletic and that there is strong genetic evidence for D. traversii's clade. The paraphyly of the genus Dracophyllum, as well as the polyphyly of the closely related genus Richea, they argued, suggested that a major taxonomic revision was required. In Venter's 2021 revision of the genus, he merged the genus Richea into two subgenera, named D. Subg. Cystanthe and D. Subg. Dracophylloides, of Dracophyllum. Though he noted that because the 2010 study was based on plastid sequence data and did not attain some species with strong enough evidence, the subgenera are instead based on morphological characteristics. D. traversii's current placement can be summarised in the cladogram at right.
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D. traversii covered in snow on Arthur's pass, where the first type specimen was taken.
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The northern form of D. traversii near Gisborne
Distribution and habitat
Dracophyllum traversii is endemic to New Zealand and is found in both the North and South Islands. In the North Island it can be found from Waima Forest south to Taumarunui but also stretches east to the East Cape. It is also found in the Coromandel, Great and Little Barrier Islands, as well as areas in the Central volcanic Plateau. In the South, it is found in North-west Nelson down to Fiordland and Central Otago. It grows through a large vertical region, from sea level up to 1,768 m (5,801 ft) on 3–75 degrees steep gradients. Common areas it can be found on include: gorges, mountainsides, saddles, and cliffs, and it prefers full sun, though will also grow in some shade. The New Zealand Threat Classification System classified it in 2017 as "Not Threatened," giving it an estimated population of at least 100,000.
D. traversii inhabits lowland and subalpine shrubland, consisting of either simply Olearia lacunosa (lancewood tree daisy); or Olearia colensoi (tupare), D. longifolium (inaka), and Coprosma; or just Nothofagus menziesii (silver beech), as well as lowland and subalpine forests, made up of several types. These include: Nothofagus menziesii, Lepidothamnus intermedius (yellow silver pine), and Weinmannia racemosa (kāmahi) forest; or Nothofagus menziesii, Phyllocladus glaucus (toatoa), and Weinmannia racemosa forest; or Libocedrus plumosa (kawaka), Knightia excelsa (rewarewa), and Astelia fragrans (bush flax) forest; or Nothofagus menziesii, and Gahnia rigida (Gahnia) forest; or Phyllocladus alpinus (mountain toatoa) and Libocedrus bidwillii (pāhautea) forest. Soil types in these areas are made up of clay or clay loam from sandstone, limestone, graywacke or shale.