top of page

Home  >  Otago drylands  >  Plants

Pimelea aridula in flower. Anna Yeoman

These golden grasslands are as false as a plastic nugget, a consequence of human modification over the last 800 years.

Read more...

eco.jpeg
plantd.jpeg

A tangle of native dryland vegetation at Mokomoko Dryland Sanctuary.

Photo:  Anna Yeoman

Take a walk

Take a walk in the real Central Otago

Central Otago and gold are tied together in our national psyche. It was the search for the mineral that sent the first Europeans into this wild interior. Years later, now that tourism is the new money earner, it’s the images of Otago’s golden tussocklands that are sold.

 

There is certainly something alluring, even mesmerising, about the limitless folds of gold under the stretched blue sky. Poets and landscape artists have deepened our connection. So it’s a shock, and sometimes a rude one, to learn that these grasslands are as false as a plastic nugget, a consequence of human modification over the last 800 years.

 

Before human arrival, the interior of Otago was richly clothed in woody plant species. Only on the schist-studded tops of the broad ranges was the iconic snow tussock (Chionochloa) found. Even here, the original plant communities were more diverse than today, with a greater proportion of shrubs and herbs. 

 

 


 

Spaniard. Anna Yeoman

Before human arrival, the interior of Otago was richly clothed in woody plant species.

sport-shoe-footprints-walking-away-with-
DSC00324 copy.jpg
DSC01043 copy.jpg

Imagine for a moment, taking a walk here a thousand years ago, down from the tops of one of the broad mountain ranges on a summer’s day. As we begin to descend we brush through tussocks and knee-high shrubs, Dracophyllum, Pimelea, a low Coprosma. As we drop below 1300 metres the going gets tougher as we enter a band of mountain toatoa and snow totara, the odd patch of bog pine. Around 1000 metres above sea level we reach what feels like the bushline proper and find ourselves under a canopy of beech and Hall’s totara. Despite the dry climate of the region, here on the upper mountain slopes the temperatures are cooler and the air more moist than in the valley below. In the wettest and most sheltered gullies we see clusters of podocarps: rimu, kahikatea and matai. 

As we continue down through the forest, the beech canopy begins to change to a more open woodland. The air feels warmer and the Hall’s totara starts to dominate, along with kowhai, kanuka and manuka. In places the going gets difficult, the canopy strung with Clematis and Muehlenbeckia vines. All around us is birdsong. As we push through a patch of small-leaved shrubs, the fragrance of Olearia odorata gives some compensation for the spiny matagouri that scratches at our forearms. 

Kanuka. Anna Yeoman

8b copy.jpg

Coprosma propinqua. Anna Yeoman

We’re almost at the valley floor now, and there’s a dry baked feeling to the air. We come out on a small north-facing knoll, where short tussocks and the porcupine plant Melicytus fringe gently-sloping slabs of schist. A skink disappears into the vegetation.

 

We sit on the warm lichen-covered slabs, enjoying what breeze the summer day provides, and look out over the gently rolling land. A mosaic of woodland, shrubland and grassland covers the basin floor. The winding lines of denser woodland indicate the courses of streams. Cabbage trees poke up their jaunty heads from among the kowhai and kanuka. Around the schist outcrops are clusters of Corokia and Coprosma. In the driest spots are open clearings, where the white flowered Pimelea aridula joins short tussock and low cushions of Raoulia. Everywhere the vegetation is diverse, shimmering in rich tones of greens, golds and greys and alive with the hum, scuttle and trill of its animal life. This was the original, living wealth of Central Otago. 

 

Everywhere the vegetation is diverse, shimmering in rich tones of greens, golds and greys and alive with the hum, scuttle and trill of its animal life.

Species gallery

Species gallery

Bibliography

McGlone, M. S. (2001) The origin of the indigenous grasslands of southeastern South island in relation to pre-human woody ecosystems. New Zealand Journal of Ecology. 25 (1): 1-15.

 

New Zealand Plant Conservation Network (2013). Flora - Vascular. Retrieved from: http://nzpcn.org.nz/page.aspx?flora

T.E.R:R.A.I.N Taranaki Educational Resource: Research, Analysis and Information Network (2017). Trees & shrubs (New Zealand native) by botanical name. Retrieved from: http://www.terrain.net.nz/friends-of-te-henui-group/trees-native-botanical-names-m-to-q.html

Walker, S., Lee, W.G. and Rogers, G.M. (2002) Woody biomes of Central Otago, New Zealand: The present and past distribution and future restoration needs. 

bottom of page