An "at risk" species of mistletoe is staging a remarkable comeback in parts of a Hawke's Bay forest following a successful possum eradication programme.
More than 200 specimens of yellow mistletoe (Alepis flavida), known as pirita or piriraki in te reo Māori, have been found in the past year by the Forest Lifeforce Restoration Trust on its property in the Maungataniwha Native Forest, adjacent to Te Urewera.
The parasitic species has leap-frogged from being unrecorded in the forest to having 21 plants seen within one host tree alone. On a single day in February this year trust volunteers and staff found 109 new plants on 49 host trees, a record daily tally for the area.
Trust manager Pete Shaw said he was "staggered" by the finds.
"It's the most remarkable change in the forest we've seen for years," Shaw said. "It's notable that the recovery is not obvious across the entire forest, though, so it's possible that we've stumbled across one or two hot-spots where this species wasn't entirely wiped out by the possums before we started our work here in 2006."