Flightless parrots, burrowing bats helped parasitic Hades flower

A New Zealand short-tailed bat pictured while eating dactylanthus.
Photo by Nga Manu Nature Reserve.
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The parasitic plant, Dactylanthus taylorii, attached to the root of a host tree.
Photo by Phil Bendle.
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Tuesday, 2 October 2012
Ancient dung from a cave in the South Island of New Zealand has revealed a previously unsuspected relationship between two of the country's most unusual threatened species.
Fossilised dung (coprolites) of a now rare parrot, the nocturnal flightless kakapo, contained large amounts of pollen of a rare parasitic plant, dactylanthus (commonly known as "wood rose" or "Hades flower"), which lives underground and has no roots or leaves itself.
Researchers from the (ACAD) at the ÐÓ°ÉÖ±²¥ of Adelaide and and the in New Zealand report the discovery today in the journal .
The musky sweet smell of the dactylanthus flower attracts the only remaining known native pollinator, the endangered New Zealand lesser short-tailed bat, which forages extensively on the forest floor.
Kakapo are extinct from mainland New Zealand and their recent introduction to the island sanctuary of Hauturu/Little Barrier Island, where dactylanthus survives, has re-united the two species for the first time in potentially a century.
"This is an important example of an apparent tight co-evolutionary relationship between threatened endemic species - the plant and burrowing bat - simply representing 'the last men standing'," said ACAD Director .
"The coprolites suggest that kakapo may have served as pollinators, probably along with other species, which is critical for conservation - and reveal the extent of the ecosystem links which have been broken."
Lead researcher , from Landcare Research in New Zealand, said: "Coprolites are one of the only ways to reconstruct important pre-human ecological relationships, such as pollination and seed dispersal, which must be restored to conserve these species over the long term."
The team is funded by a New Zealand Marsden grant to study the pre-human ecosystem using preserved coprolites from caves and rockshelters across New Zealand.
from Landcare Research said: "Dactylanthus is now restricted to around 4% of its pre-human range, due to forest clearance, predation by introduced mammals and a lack of pollinators and seed dispersers. Scattered populations only survive in the central North Island."
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Director, ÐÓ°ÉÖ±²¥n Centre for Ancient DNA
The ÐÓ°ÉÖ±²¥ of Adelaide
Adriana Russo
Email: adriana.russo@adelaide.edu.au
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