Passionate volunteers are devoting their time to pollinate the rare native Dactylanthus taylorii, near the top of Mt Pirongia
Māori know them as Pua O Te Reinga. They're also known as the Wood Rose - an unusual underground plant that's only found on the forest floor in New Zealand.
The indigenous plant has been in decline over the past few years due to three main things, "the loss of its main pollinator the short-tailed-bat, humans - for having dug it up and possums for browsing the floors and digging up the tubers", according to the Department of Conservation's biodiversity superviser, Thomas Emmitt.
"Short tailed bats are absolutely vital, nothing else does a good as job as the Short Tailed Bat. By hand pollinating, we can produce seed, rats and mice also produce a small amount of seed (by spreading nectar from the male to female plants), but instead of getting a thousand seeds per seed head you might get 50 seeds per seed head," Mr Emmitt says.
For the last year, 25 dedicated volunteers who form the Pirongia Te Aroaro o Kahu Restoration Society have been working on the pollination project.