User:Alexeyevitch/Fuchsia excorticata: Difference between revisions

 

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”F. excorticata”{{‘}}s fruits are [[Biological dispersal|dispersed]] by fruit-eating animals (frugivores).{{Sfn|De Lange|2025}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}} ”F. excorticata”{{‘}}s fruits are an important food source for numerous New Zealand native birds, and they are an especially important food source for the [[kererū]] (”Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae”). Other New Zealand birds, such as the [[tūī]] (”Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae”) and the [[New Zealand bellbird]] (”Anthornis melanura”) consume the fruits frequently.{{Sfn|Godley|Berry|1995|p=18}}{{Sfn|Vennell|2019|p=227}} A. E. Beveridge (1964) estimated that a single dropping from an introduced [[common blackbird|blackbird]] (”Turdus merula”) produced 178 seedlings, thus proving the efficiency of blackbirds as seed distributors.{{Sfn|Beveridge|1964|p=3}} The fruits of ”F. excorticata” can also be part of the diet of the flightless [[kākāpō]] (”Strigops habroptilus”). German-born New Zealand explorer [[Julius von Haast]] said that he saw a kākāpō “sitting on a Fuchsia-tree, 10 feet from the ground, and eating berries”.{{Sfn|Haast|1864|pp=3–4}}

”F. excorticata”{{‘}}s fruits are [[Biological dispersal|dispersed]] by fruit-eating animals (frugivores).{{Sfn|De Lange|2025}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}} ”F. excorticata”{{‘}}s fruits are an important food source for numerous New Zealand native birds, and they are an especially important food source for the [[kererū]] (”Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae”). Other New Zealand birds, such as the [[tūī]] (”Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae”) and the [[New Zealand bellbird]] (”Anthornis melanura”) consume the fruits frequently.{{Sfn|Godley|Berry|1995|p=18}}{{Sfn|Vennell|2019|p=227}} A. E. Beveridge (1964) estimated that a single dropping from an introduced [[common blackbird|blackbird]] (”Turdus merula”) produced 178 seedlings, thus proving the efficiency of blackbirds as seed distributors.{{Sfn|Beveridge|1964|p=3}} The fruits of ”F. excorticata” can also be part of the diet of the flightless [[kākāpō]] (”Strigops habroptilus”). German-born New Zealand explorer [[Julius von Haast]] said that he saw a kākāpō “sitting on a Fuchsia-tree, 10 feet from the ground, and eating berries”.{{Sfn|Haast|1864|pp=3–4}}

A [[Self-incompatibility|self-incompatibile]] tree.{{sfn|Van Etten|Robertson|Tate|2013|p=1}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}} [floral structure pollination]

A [[Self-incompatibility|self-incompatibile]] tree.{{sfn|Van Etten|Robertson|Tate|2013|p=1}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}} [floral structure pollination]

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It can also be [[Pollination|pollinated]] by birds.{{sfn|Delph|Lively|1985|pp=599–603}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}}

It can also be [[Pollination|pollinated]] by birds.{{sfn|Delph|Lively|1985|pp=599–603}}{{sfn|Robertson|Ladley|Kelly|McNutt|2008|p=1}}

The [[tree wētā]] (”Hemideina”) consumes its seeds.{{sfn|Wyman|Trewick|Morgan‐Richards|Noble|2011|p=2}} A favoured food source for the [[Common brushtail possum in New Zealand|common brushtail possums]].{{Sfn|Sweetapple|Nugent|1999|p=1}} [mammals]

The [[tree wētā]] (”Hemideina”) consumes its seeds.{{sfn|Wyman|Trewick|Morgan‐Richards|Noble|2011|p=2}} A favoured food source for the [[Common brushtail possum in New Zealand|common brushtail possums]].{{Sfn|Sweetapple|Nugent|1999|p=1}} [mammals]

Fuchsia excorticata, commonly known as the kōtukutuku and tree fuchsia, is a species of tree in the family Onagraceae that is endemic to New Zealand. A truly unusual tree, it is the largest Fuchsia species and is deciduous, an uncommon trait in New Zealand plants. It reaches 13 metres (40 feet) in height with a trunk up to 70 cm (28 in) in diameter. Its range mainly covers the North, South, and Stewart Islands, but found as far south as the Auckland Islands. It inhabits lowland to montane ecosystems, and is especially common near streams and forest margins. F. excorticata is noted for its bark, which naturally peels off into thin sheets of paper. Its scientific name, excorticata, reflects this distinctive property.

F. excorticata was first described by the German naturalists Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster in 1775. F. excorticata is self-compatible, but its colourful flowers commonly attract bird pollinators. F. excorticatas fruits are dispersed by fruit-eating animals (frugivores), such as birds. F. excorticata is one of New Zealand’s least flammable trees, which earned it the nickname “bucket-of-water” tree by early European settlers as it is very difficult to burn. F. excorticta is a culturally important tree to the indegenous Māori people; it had multiple uses, importantly, the berries were used as a source of food. They were also eaten by early European settlers in the forms of jams and puddings. F. excorticatas 2023 assessment in the New Zealand Threat Classification System was “Not Threatened”.

Fuchsia excorticata (kōtukutuku) is a gynodioecious and deciduous species of tree in the family Onagraceae, reaching up to 13 metres (40 feet) in height with a twisted trunk, which is up to 70 cm (30 in) in diameter. It branches within several metres from the base, forming a spreading canopy. F. excorticata is the largest member of the genus Fuchsia; while most species grow as shrubs or small trees, this species has evolved in New Zealand to reach a much greater height. F. excorticata is noted for its shredding bark, which is a copper, orange, to reddish-brown in colour, and naturally peels off into thin sheets of paper, revealing the smooth pale green cambial layer in the inner bark. The leaves are up to 10 cm (4 in) long and 1.5–3 cm (0.6–1 in) wide. They are glabrous and slightly strigose in character and acute to rounded in shape. They are medium to dark green on the upperside and silver or white on the underside of the leaves.

Fuchsia excorticata is one of few deciduous trees in New Zealand. Throughout most of its range in the South Island and in the mountainous areas of the North Island, F. excorticata loses its leaves in autumn and reproduces them in spring, although some populations in the North Island retain them. A population of completely deciduous trees have been recorded as far north as Auckland. A 1936 study conducted in Dunedin revealed that leaf fall begins in early May and lasts for three to four weeks. F. excorticata remains leafless until new shoots start to appear in August or September.

Flowering occurs mostly from August to December; flowers grow individually but the tree can sometimes exhibit cauliflory, where they grow directly from stems or the main trunk. The ovaries are 4.5–8 mm long, 1.7–3 mm thick and green in colour. The sepals are narrow-triangular in character, 8 mm long, 3 mm wide at the base, and lustrous green in colour with dull purple streaks at the upper parts between the ridges, then changing to a red or crimson colour in the middle.

The petals are dark purple in colour and 1.8–5 mm long, 0.7–2.1 mm wide in the middle. The filaments are a purple to pale cream colour, 6–15 mm and 5–10 mm long, pollen-collecting anthers are also purple, 1.8–2.5 mm long and 1–1.7 mm thick. The styles are green to yellow in colour and 22–40 mm long. The stigmas are yellow to green in colour, 1.8–2.2 mm long and 1.4–2.1 mm wide. Fruits are a black to dark purple colour, 9–13 mm long and 5–8 mm thick. The seeds are a tan colour, 0.75–1 mm long and 0.3–0.6 mm broad, each fruit consists of about 320–670 seeds. F. excorticata has a gametic chromosome count of 11.

              
         

F. × colensoi   

F. excorticata  

F. cyrtandroides 

         

F. procumbnes

Cladogram depicting the phylogeny of selected species within the genus Fuchsias ‘South Pacific’ clade (group).

Berry et al. (2004) used cladistics to produce a phylogenetic tree of the genus Fuchsia, as such, F. excorticatas placement can be summarised in the represented cladogram. The South Pacific Fuchsia lineage diverged approximately thirty million years ago, supported by fossil evidence from Australia and New Zealand.

F. excorticata was first collected in October 1769 by the botanists Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander, on the first voyage of James Cook. It was collected in Anaura Bay near Gisborne. A specimen was also collected in the South Island’s Queen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui. These localities were noted in their notes titled “Primitiae Florae Novae Zelandiae” (Beginnings of a Flora of New Zealand). The species was first described by the German naturalists Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster in 1775, first recorded under the name Skinnera excorticata. In 1782, Carl Linnaeus the Younger placed the plant in the genus Fuchsia, which remains the species accepted scientific name and genus placement.

The etymology (word origin) of F. excorticatas genus name, Fuchsia ( FEW-shə), is named in honour of the German physician and botanist Leonhart Fuchs. The specific epithet (second part of the scientific name), excorticata, means ‘loose-barked’, and reflects the distinctive peeling property of the tree’s bark. The former generic name, Skinnera, was named after the botanist Richard Skinner. The species is commonly known as kōtukutuku, native fuchsia, and tree fuchsia. The Māori language name, kōtukutuku, likewise refers to the species’ peeling bark. The same name is also applied to female tōtara (Podocarpus totara) and kaikawaka (Libocedrus bidwillii), both of which share the same distinctive properties.

A huhu beetle, a brown-yellow beetle, perched on an unidentified species of rotten wood.
A tūī, a black and blue bird with white throat tufts, perched on a F. excorticata specimen.
A tūī visiting a F. excorticata specimen

F. excorticatas fruits are dispersed by fruit-eating animals (frugivores). F. excorticatas fruits are an important food source for numerous New Zealand native birds, and they are an especially important food source for the kererū (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae). Other New Zealand birds, such as the tūī (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae) and the New Zealand bellbird (Anthornis melanura) consume the fruits frequently. A. E. Beveridge (1964) estimated that a single dropping from an introduced blackbird (Turdus merula) produced 178 seedlings, thus proving the efficiency of blackbirds as seed distributors. The fruits of F. excorticata can also be part of the diet of the flightless kākāpō (Strigops habroptilus). German-born New Zealand explorer Julius von Haast said that he saw a kākāpō “sitting on a Fuchsia-tree, 10 feet from the ground, and eating berries”.

A self-incompatibile tree. [floral structure pollination]

When the tree is flowering, the blue pollen that the tree produces
can cover the birds’ foreheads. The stitchbirds (Pogonornis cincta), silvereyes (Zosterops lateralis), as well as bumblebees (Bombus spp.) have been reported as visitors on F. excorticata flowers.

It can also be pollinated by birds.

Evidence presented by a 2012 study shows that the upland moa (Megalapteryx didinus) also fed on the nectar.

The tree wētā (Hemideina) consumes its seeds. A favoured food source for the common brushtail possums. [mammals]

F. excorticata plays host to the endemic insect, the huhu beetle (Oemona hirta) and several beetles from the Acalles genus.

F. excorticata has very low flammability rates. A 2025 study showed that F. excorticata had a moderate ignition percentage, burn time, and burned biomass.[26]
[flammability]

[fungi info]

A mature F. excorticata overhanging a trail. A hiker can be seen directly under the specimen walking foward.
A mature F. excorticata specimen overhanging the Key Summit Track in Fiordland, South Island

F. excorticata is endemic to New Zealand. It is the most widely distributed Fuchsia species in the South Pacific. Its range mainly covers the North and South Islands, but can be found as far south as the Auckland Islands; where it has only been recorded in one locality in Laurie Harbour at Port Ross. In 1980, the New Zealand botanist Colin Meurk, on an expedition to the Auckland Islands, said that he saw F. excorticata scattered along a small tributary at about 75 m (200 ft) in elevation on the south side of Grey Duck Creek 200 m (700 ft) away from the mouth of Laurie Harbour. It was commonly found in association with pikopiko (Asplenium bulbiferum) and tūpare (Macrolearia colensoi).

F. excorticata is uncommon on Stewart Island, with its population being reduced by browsing mammals; the species was likely never a dominant tree species there due to low soil fertility. There is also a naturalised population on the Chatham Islands, but it was introduced there by humans. Godley & Berry (1995) noted a person who visited the island in 1976 said that they were assured that “F. excorticata was introduced there about 90 years ago”. F. excorticatas 2023 assessment in the New Zealand Threat Classification System was “Not Threatened”.

F. excorticata is typically found in lowland and montane ecosystems, and is commonly found along streams and forest margins. It has a wide altitudinal range of 0–1,050 m (0–3,445 ft) above sea level. It can establish itself in most soil conditions, but generally prefers to grow in riparian soils and can also be utilised as a predecessor species for areas where conditions and soils are not the best. The soil contents in river-bed forests, where F. excorticata commonly grows, can consist of a surface layer of humus overlaying a layer of river-shingle. F. excorticata prefers shaded areas but can still grow well in sunny areas. The species is commonly found in mixed angiosperm-podocarp or beech (Nothofagus) forests, but it is also common in other disturbed forests.

Vegetation in these areas where F. excorticata grows in can vary; for example, in plant communities that grow especially near rivers, F. excorticata can be commonly associated with wineberry (Aristotelia serrata), māhoe (Melicytus ramiflorus), and koromiko (Veronica salicifolia). F. excorticata can also exhibit some colonial characteristics, especially after glacier retreatment and deforestation.

I whea koe i te ngahorotanga o te rau o te kōtukutuku
Where wert thou in the falling of the leaves of the kōtukutuku?

In Māori culture, F. excorticatas blooming flowers in September are a traditional indicator sign of the lunar calendar in the North Island, as a sign to plant early spring crops such as kūmara (sweet potato). The fruits, known as kōnini, are an important traditional food source and were often collected from trees by men. Other Māori language names for the plant include: kōhutuhutu, kōhutuku, and kōnini. The fruits are known in Māori as kōnini, tākawa, hōnā, and māti. It “…yields a purple dye and affords a good ink”. [complete Māori sect]

F. excorticatas purple-black fruit was eaten by Māori and European settlers in the form of jams and puddings. The timber is very durable. It has been used for cabinetwork, inkstands, inlaying, ornamental turnery, and picture-frames. The timber has also been used for house-blocks and fencing. It has been described as
“almost indestructible” and largely unaffected by fire and decay by the botanist Thomas Kirk. In the 1885–1886 fire in Taranaki, a lot of fencing was destroyed, but the F. excorticata timber were signed but not burned through. [separate timber uses and uses as food]

European settlers also experimented with the bark as a substitue for tobacco, although it was not very effective.

British missionary Richard Taylor called the fruits “sweet though rather insipid”. It has also been described as “pleasant to the taste, and very full of flavour”.

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