Field Notes On The Nikau
Rhopalostylis sapida by any other name. Peter
Richardson and Stephen Powell contribute two sides of the same coin.
by Peter Richardson, Advanced Technologies Ltd.,
Science Park, Cambridge, U.K.
Chamaerops No. 07, published online 23-10-2002

The Shaving Brush Palm (Rhopalostylis sapida) in
habitat
My second trip to New Zealand, in March, to collect
seed in tracts of native bush in the northern half of the North
Island, gave me plenty of opportunity to get to know the Nikau Palm
(Rhopalostylis sapida) in the native habitat It's a favourite warm-temperate
palm of mine because the crownshaft and clean, ringed trunk give
it a decidedly tropical look in contrast to the phoenicoid and coryphoid
warm-temperate palms of the northern hemisphere with their persistent
leaf bases and matted fibres. And it is used to maritime westerly
winds like those that dominate the British climate.
Native-plant buffs in New Zealand claim there are
regional forms of the Nikau of varying stoutness and crown shapes.
However, the areas I covered were limited to the northern, subtropical
zone and yet I saw all shapes and sizes of palm, the differences
seeming to reflect the age of the plants, vigour and illumination.
Their size I found extremely variable according to the site. Trunked
plants can have leaves as short as 120 cm or up to 4m long. Correspondingly,
the trunks varied from 12-22cm in diameter. Lush plants that had
put height on fast in their youth had internodes up to 4cm wide,
and they stay green in shade. In the case of a 20cm diameter tree
with 4cm internodes, the tree is adding a solid cylinder of trunk
of volume 1.25 litres to itself with each leaf produced. Higher
up the trunks of mature plants the internodes become narrower until
one leafscar is touching the next.
The narrowest, most columnar crowns belong to very
vigorous adolescent to young-adult trees in some shade. Very deep
shade causes most plants to adopt a more lax shape. Direct sun stimulates
a stiff shuttlecock shape, the margins of the pinnae rolled back
in a curl, with the outer leaves characteristically tattered and
burnt at the tips in all but the most sheltered and humid spots.
The most perfect plants are found in windless deep shade, usually
in gully bottoms, and there look rather like the Nikau's Australian
relative, Archontophoenix cunninghamii. They are extremely slow
growing; maybe only one or two leaves a year, in these conditions.
Fortunately, their general hard, leatheriness makes them unpalatable
to herbivores generally, and even the voracious possums leave them
alone.
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