New Zealand Plant Conservation Network
  • Member login
  • Join
Facebook
  • Home
  • Flora
    • Flora species
    • Tag names
    • Vascular
    • Non-vascular
    • Lichens
    • Plant identification
    • Fungi
    • Make your own book
    • Quiz
  • Threats
    • Exotic Plants (Weeds)
    • Pest Animals
    • Other threats
  • Ecosystems
    • Plant communities
    • Ecosystem services
    • Novel ecosystems
  • Publications
    • Documents
    • Newsletter
    • Plant lists
    • Botanical Society journals
    • NZPCN publications
  • Conservation
    • Seedbank
    • Training
    • Restoration
    • Monitoring
    • Habitat protection
    • Funding
    • Botanic gardens
    • Botanic Societies
  • NZPCN
    • News
    • Trilepidea newsletter
    • Events
    • David Given Scholarship
    • Council members
    • Awards
    • Shop
    • Donate
    • Favourite Plant
    • Why join NZPCN?
    • Join
  • Help
    • FAQ
    • Query
    • Glossary
  • Contact us

Search flora

  1. Tracheophyta
    • Tracheophyta
  2. Magnoliopsida
    • Lycopodiopsida
    • Magnoliopsida
    • Pinopsida
    • Polypodiopsida
  3. Malvales
    • Alismatales
    • Apiales
    • Arecales
    • Asparagales
    • Asterales
    • Boraginales
    • Brassicales
    • Canellales
    • Caryophyllales
    • Celastrales
    • Chloranthales
    • Crossosomatales
    • Cucurbitales
    • Dioscoreales
    • Ericales
    • Fabales
    • Fagales
    • Gentianales
    • Geraniales
    • Gunnerales
    • Lamiales
    • Laurales
    • Liliales
    • Malpighiales
    • Malvales
    • Myrtales
    • Nymphaeales
    • Oxalidales
    • Pandanales
    • Paracryphiales
    • Piperales
    • Poales
    • Proteales
    • Ranunculales
    • Rosales
    • Santalales
    • Sapindales
    • Saxifragales
    • Solanales
  4. Malvaceae
    • Malvaceae
    • Thymelaeaceae
  5. Plagianthus
    • Entelea
    • Hibiscus
    • Hoheria
    • Plagianthus
    • Sabdariffa
  6. Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus
    • Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus
    • Plagianthus divaricatus
    • Plagianthus regius subsp. regius

Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus

Nikau Bush, Chatham Island. Feb 1995.<br>Photographer: Geoff Walls, Licence: <a target='_blank' href='https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0'>CC BY-NC</a>.
Te Awatea Scenic Reserve, Chatham Island. Mar 1999.<br>Photographer: Geoff Walls, Licence: <a target='_blank' href='https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0'>CC BY-NC</a>.
South East Island. Jan 1997.<br>Photographer: Phil Knightbridge, Licence: All rights reserved.
Te One, Chatham Island. Aug 1999.<br>Photographer: Geoff Walls, Licence: <a target='_blank' href='https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0'>CC BY-NC</a>.
Download PDF Comment on factsheet

NZPCN members can select up to 20 plant species and automatically create a full colour, fully illustrated A4 book describing them (in PDF format).

  • Find out more...
  • Join NZPCN...
Find in plant lists
iNaturalist NZ View observations Biota of NZ Click here to view NZ Flora Click here to view Te Papa specimens View specimens Herbarium View AVH specimens Donate Support NZPCN

Common names

Chatham Island ribbonwood, mareira parakau

Biostatus

Native – Endemic taxon

Current conservation status

The conservation status of all known New Zealand vascular plant taxa at the rank of species and below were reassessed in 2022-2023 using the New Zealand Threat Classification System (NZTCS) – more information about this can be found on the NZTCS website. This report includes replaces all previous NZTCS lists for vascular plants. Previous assessments can be found here.

  • Conservation status of vascular plants in Aotearoa New Zealand, 2023. 2024. Peter J. de Lange, Jane Gosden, Shannel P. Courtney, Alexander J. Fergus, John W. Barkla, Sarah M. Beadel, Paul D. Champion, Rowan Hindmarsh-Walls, Troy Makan and Pascale Michel Department of Conservation. Source: NZTCS and licensed by DOC for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

2023 | At Risk – Declining | Qualifiers: CD, DPS, DPT, IE, PF

Jump to previous conservation statuses

Category

Vascular

Structural class

Trees & Shrubs - Dicotyledons

Simplified description

Tall tree with soft jagged pointed leaves and long sprays of tiny yellowish flowers and small green fruit that fall as a unit inhabiting the Chatham Islands. Wood soft. No marked juvenile growth form. Leaves 3-7.5cm long, much wider at base.

Flower colours

Green

Detailed description

Deciduous, dioecious, rounded or flat-topped trees 10−16(−18) m tall. Trunk up to 1 m d.bh., bark smooth, if torn peeling in long fibrous strips; surface brown-grey to grey, colour usually obscured by dense lichen growth (Amandinea, Bacidia, Lecanora, Pyrenula, Ramalina and Xanthoria species especially). Branches divergent to upright, often densely branched; branchlets, terete, pliant when young, brittle with age, if broken, leaving long tears of bark beyond damage point; initially finely pubescent, pubescent-villous, hairs grey-white, ± patent, hairs shedding with age. Buds, solitary, acute, densely covered in pubescent-villous, grey-white hairs; bud scales valvate (3−)4−5, (0.4−)0.6−0.8 mm long, deltoid, ± subulate, abaxially pubescent-villous, caducous. Leaves exstipulate, alternate distichous, ± closely spaced toward branchlet apices, soft and pliant, somewhat chartaceous with pinnate venation, surfaces finely pubescent when young, hairs shedding with age, ± glabrescent, adaxially light lime green to green, abaxially paler; midrib concolorous with lamina adaxially, paler beneath, not or scarcely raised above, distinctly so abaxially, finely pubescent, indumentum shedding in irregular patches with age; petioles, 15−20(−25) mm long, terete, finely pubescent, glabrescent. Lamina of juvenile 40−70(−80) × 26−34(−40) mm, of adult 70−90(−100) × 40−60(−65) mm; ovate, ovate-deltoid, apices acute to acuminate, base obtuse to subcordate, biserrate. Inflorescences axillary or terminal, borne in much-branched, suberect or pendent, compound, cymose panicles (65−)100(−140) × 80−100(−160) mm long, green to yellow green. Inflorescences axis terete, initially pubescent, indumentum shedding with maturity, leaving sparse to dense patches of patent hairs; branch axis, bracteate, bracts 3−5 × 3−6 mm, caducous, ovate-deltoid, deltoid, acute, surfaces finely pubescent. Flowers 5−6 mm diameter: ♂ yellow-green or greenish-white, sweetly scented; ♀ light green, without scent. Calyx campanulate to funneliform, 1.8−2.0 mm long, pale green or yellow-green, with 5 deltoid or oblong, acute or mucronate teeth. Petals 2.4−2.8 mm long (♂), 2.0−2.4 mm long (♀), spathulate-oblong, oblong, clawed, yellow-green, greenish-white or green, shedding after anthesis. ♂ with exserted staminal column, anthers 10−12, 0.3−0.5 mm long, sessile, pale yellow or yellow-orange, gynoecium vestigial, surmounting column. ♀ with androecium vestigial, forming a ring below stigma; stigma (3−5)−6, spreading, greenish. Fruits usually exserted from persistent calyx, 3−5 mm long, ovoid, apex acute.

Similar taxa

Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus is one of the tallest trees on the Chatham Islands, and it is also the only deciduous one. The stout greyish trunk, broad canopy, lime green soft leaves with doubly serrated margins, and pendent greenish-yellow inflorescences and flowers readily identify it. In autumn the foliage turns yellow-green or yellow before falling. Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus is closely related to the Aotearoa / New Zealand subsp. regius, from which it differs by the lack of the filiramulate, divaricating juvenile growth habit (Cockayne 1912; de Lange 2008). Though the foliage of subsp. chathamicus is smaller than the adult, the branchlets are not interlaced; rather they tend to be erect and/or spreading. The juvenile state of subsp. chathamicus is usually very short-lived and is sometimes absent.

Distribution

Endemic. Rekohu (Chatham), Rangihaute (Pitt), Maung’re, Tapuaenuku, and Hokorereoro (South-east) Islands.

Habitat

Found on free draining, fertile soils throughout the main islands. Often an important species on soils derived from limestone, and basalt. This tree avoids poorly drained soils and peat.

Threats

Threatened from browsing by sheep, cattle and horses which browse foliage, ring bark or strip the bark off adult trees and kill seedlings. Pigs root up seedlings and saplings and may browse them as well. Possums browse foliage, flowers and seedlings. Land clearance for farming and fires are additional threats. Very few populations of manatu are secure from these threats on the islands.

Detailed taxonomy

Genus

Plagianthus

Family

Malvaceae

Authority

Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus (Cockayne) de Lange

Synonyms

Plagianthus chathamicus Cockayne; Plagianthus betulinus var. chathamicus (Cockayne) Cockayne

Endemic taxon

Yes

Endemic genus

Yes

Endemic family

No

Ecology

Flowering

October - February

Fruiting

December - June

Propagation technique

Easily grown from fresh seed. A very fast growing tree ideal for providing quick cover. Does best on free draining, but moist and fertile soils in full sun but can tolerate some shade.

Other information

Etymology

plagianthus: Oblique or lop-sided flower (petals uneven at the base)

regius: Royal

chathamicus: From the Chathams

NVS code

The National Vegetation Survey (NVS) Databank is a physical archive and electronic databank containing records of over 94,000 vegetation survey plots - including data from over 19,000 permanent plots. NVS maintains a standard set of species code abbreviations that correspond to standard scientific plant names from the Ngä Tipu o Aotearoa - New Zealand Plants database.

PLARSC

Chromosome number

2n = 42

Previous conservation statuses

The conservation status of all known New Zealand vascular plant taxa at the rank of species and below were reassessed in 2022-2023 using the New Zealand Threat Classification System (NZTCS) – more information about this can be found on the NZTCS website. This report includes replaces all previous NZTCS lists for vascular plants. Previous assessments can be found here.

  • Conservation status of vascular plants in Aotearoa New Zealand, 2023. 2024. Peter J. de Lange, Jane Gosden, Shannel P. Courtney, Alexander J. Fergus, John W. Barkla, Sarah M. Beadel, Paul D. Champion, Rowan Hindmarsh-Walls, Troy Makan and Pascale Michel Department of Conservation. Source: NZTCS and licensed by DOC for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

2017 | At Risk – Recovering | Qualifiers: CD, IE

2012 | At Risk – Recovering | Qualifiers: CD, IE

2009 | At Risk – Recovering | Qualifiers: CD, IE

2004 | Serious Decline

Jump to current conservation status

Referencing and citations

References and further reading

Cockayne, L. 1912: Observations concerning evolution, derived from ecological studies in New Zealand. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute 44: 1–50.

de Lange, P.J. 2008: Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus (Malvaceae) - a new combination for the Chatham Islands endemic tree. New Zealand Journal of Botany 46: 381-386.

Attribution

Fact Sheet prepared for NZPCN by P.J. de Lange 12 May 2022. Description by P.J. de Lange.

NZPCN Fact Sheet citation

Please cite as: de Lange, P.J. (Year at time of access): Plagianthus regius subsp. chathamicus Fact Sheet (content continuously updated). New Zealand Plant Conservation Network. https://www.nzpcn.org.nz/flora/species/plagianthus-regius-subsp-chathamicus/ (Date website was queried)

▲ Back to top
  • Home
  • Flora
  • Threats
  • Ecosystems
  • Publications
  • Conservation
  • NZPCN
  • Help
  • Contact us

© 2026 New Zealand Plant Conservation Network • Website by RS

Coastlands Plant Nursery Wildlands

Website sponsor

  • Home
  • Flora
    • Flora species
    • Tag names
    • Vascular
      • Ferns
        • King fern
        • True ferns
        • Adder's tongue ferns
        • Fork ferns and whisk ferns
        • Horsetails
      • Conifers
        • Celery pines
        • Kauri
        • Podocarps
          • Podocarpus
          • Dacrydium
          • Prumnopitys
          • Dacrycarpus
          • Halocarpus
          • Lepidothamnus
          • Manoao
        • Cypress
      • Flowering plants
        • Parasites
          • Leafy mistletoes
          • Pygmy mistletoes
            • Korthalsella flowers
            • Korthalsella hosts
            • Dispersal of Korthalsella
            • Associates of Korthalsella
          • Root parasites
          • Saprophytes
        • Epiphytes
          • NZ
            • Typical
            • Occasional
            • Hemi-epiphytes
            • Ephemeral
            • NZ list
        • Monocots
          • Orchids
            • Structure
          • Grasses
        • Dicots
          • Hebes
          • Kowhai
          • Coprosma
          • Beech
          • Rata
        • Carnivorous
        • Deciduous plants
        • Aquatic plants
      • Poisonous natives
      • Threatened plant lists
      • What's a vascular plant?
      • Club mosses
    • Non-vascular
      • Bryophytes
        • Liverworts
        • Mosses
        • Hornworts
      • Algae
        • Seaweeds
    • Lichens
    • Plant identification
      • Written descriptions
      • Experts
      • Plant keys
        • Key to parasitic plant genera
      • Collecting plants
        • Should I collect
        • Choosing a specimen
        • Field notes
        • Fresh plant material
        • Pressing and drying
        • Mounting specimens
        • Labelling specimens
    • Fungi
    • Make your own book
    • Quiz
  • Threats
    • Exotic Plants (Weeds)
      • Unwanted organisms
      • DOC weeds
      • Plant me instead
      • Pest Plant Accord
    • Pest Animals
      • Mammals
        • Mustelids
        • Rodents
        • Ungulates
        • Possums
      • Fish
      • Insects
    • Other threats
      • Natural events
        • Insects
      • Human induced
        • Habitat loss
        • Collection
        • Climate change
  • Ecosystems
    • Plant communities
      • Dunes
        • Volcanic
        • Coastal
          • Threats
          • Common species
          • Research on dunes
          • Pingao research
          • What you can do
      • Wetlands
        • Estuaries
          • Common estuarine species
          • Research on estuaries
        • Ephemeral
        • Restiad peat bogs
      • Forests
        • Kauri-podocarp-broadleaved
        • Podocarp broadleaved
        • Beech
      • Scrub/shrublands
        • Geothermal
          • Distribution of geothermal vegetation
          • Geothermal plants
          • Geothermal vegetation types
          • Threats to geothermal vegetation
        • Frost flat/hollow
        • Manuka fens
        • Gumlands
      • Grasslands
        • Tussock grasslands
      • Bare ground
        • Braided rivers
        • Alpine
        • Cliff
        • Scree and boulderfields
        • Shingle beaches
      • Herbfields
        • Saltpan
    • Ecosystem services
    • Novel ecosystems
  • Publications
    • Documents
    • Newsletter
    • Plant lists
      • Search plant lists
      • Plant lists by political region/district
      • Plant lists by ecological region/district
      • National plant lists
      • How to prepare a plant list
    • Botanical Society journals
    • NZPCN publications
  • Conservation
    • Seedbank
      • Project 1 - Pohutukawa, Rata and Myrtaceae
      • Project 2 - Alpine flora and the Forget-Me-Nots
      • Project 3 - Kowhai and its relatives
      • Project 4 - Podocarps and trees of the forest
    • Training
      • Module 1: Plant life
      • Module 2: Covenants
      • Module 3: Propagation
      • Module 4: Wetlands
      • Pilot course 2006
    • Restoration
      • Gardening
        • Being weed wise
        • Garden plants
          • Trees and shrubs
          • Broad-leaved herbs
          • Grass-like herbs
          • Climbers
          • Ferns
        • Attracting wildlife
        • Planting for lizards
          • Rules
      • Species recovery
        • Plant translocations
      • Ecological restoration
        • Case studies
          • Tavora Reserve
          • Waiwhakareke
      • Revegetation
      • Eco-sourcing
      • Find a restoration group
    • Monitoring
      • Number count
        • Number count method
        • Pros and cons of number counts
        • Data analysis and interpretation
      • Presence/absence surveys
        • Presence/absence survey methods
        • Pros and cons of presence/absence surveys
        • Data analysis and interpretation
      • Mapping spatial extent
        • Spatial extent mapping methods
        • Pros and cons of spatial extent mapping
        • Data analysis and interpretation
      • Photo points
        • Photo point guidelines
    • Habitat protection
      • Legal protection
        • Nga Whenua Rahui
        • QEII covenants
        • DOC Covenants
      • Animal pest control
      • Weed control
      • Fencing
    • Funding
    • Botanic gardens
    • Botanic Societies
  • NZPCN
    • News
    • Trilepidea newsletter
    • Events
      • 2026 NZPCN conference
        • 2026 Conference field trips
        • 2026 Conference workshops
        • 2026 conference sponsors
        • 2026 Conference keynote speakers
      • 2024 AGM
      • Conference 2024
        • 2024 conference overview
        • Conference 2024 workshops
        • Conference 2024 Field Trips
        • 2024 conference sponsors
        • Conference 2024 accommodation options
        • 2024 Conference Programme
      • Conference 2022
        • Conference programme summary
        • 2022 conference workshops
        • 2022 conference field trips
        • Code of conduct
        • COVID-19 information
        • 2022 conference sponsors
        • Abstract and poster submission
        • 2022 Conference venue and accommodation
        • Conference Workshop: Restoration Pathways
        • 2022 conference postponement
      • Conference 2019
      • Conference 2017
      • Conference 2015
        • Speakers
        • Workshops
        • Field trips
        • Charity auction
      • Conference 2013
        • Speakers
        • Timetable
      • 2023 Restoration Pathways Workshop
      • 2023 AGM
    • David Given Scholarship
      • David Given Scholarship Recipients
    • Council members
      • NZPCN council member profiles
      • Council 2023
      • Council 2022
      • Council 2021
      • Council 2020
      • Council 2019
      • Council 2018
      • Council 2017
      • Council 2016
      • Council 2015
      • Council 2014
      • Council 2024
      • Council 2013
      • Council 2012
      • Council 2011
      • Council 2010
      • Council 2009
      • Council 2008
      • Council 2007
      • Council 2006
      • Council 2005
      • Council 2004
      • Council 2003
    • Awards
      • NZPCN Awards
        • 2024 Plant Conservation Awards
        • 2022
        • 2019
        • 2018
        • 2017
        • 2016
        • 2015
        • 2014
        • 2013
        • 2012
        • 2011
        • 2010
        • 2009
        • 2008
        • 2007
        • 2006
        • 2005
    • Shop
    • Donate
    • Favourite Plant
    • Why join NZPCN?
    • Join
  • Help
    • FAQ
      • Joining the Network
      • The Network
      • Network website
      • New Zealand plants
      • The law
      • Your discoveries
    • Query
    • Glossary
  • Contact us
  • Facebook