Sporadanthus ferrugineus

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Sporadanthus ferrugineus
Sporadanthus ferrugineus growing at the bog of Moanatuatua Scientific Reserve

Relict (NZ TCS)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Restionaceae
Genus: Sporadanthus
Species:
S. ferrugineus
Binomial name
Sporadanthus ferrugineus

Sporadanthus ferrugineus, the bamboo rush or giant wire rush, is a restiad plant endemic to the northern North Island of New Zealand.

It was long considered that Sporadanthus plants in the North Island were the same species as Sporadanthus traversii, which is native to Chatham Island, east of the New Zealand mainland. The North Island plants were described as the separate species S. ferrugineus in 1999, with S. traversii becoming regarded as endemic to Chatham Island.[2]

Distribution

S. ferrugineus grows in acidic, ombrotrophic, restiad-dominated raised bogs. Draining of such bogs for farming in the northern North Island has greatly reduced their extent. S. ferrugineus is now mainly found at the peat domes of Kopuatai and Torehape on the Hauraki Plains and Moanatuatua Swamp in the Waikato basin.[2]

Biology

Evidence of feeding by Houdinia flexilissima

S. ferrugineus is the only known food source for the moth Houdinia flexilissima.[3]

Conservation

References

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