Northland MP Winston Peters says the fact all five cases of myrtle rust found so far have been in or next to plant nurseries casts doubt on the theory the plant disease arrived on the wind from Australia.
The fungus was originally found in a Kerikeri plant nursery on May 2, sparking a major biosecurity response, and a few days later in a neighbouring garden. On May 16 it was also found in a plant nursery in Waitara, Taranaki, and on May 19 in a second nursery in Waitara and a garden centre in downtown New Plymouth.
The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) said there was no known link between the Kerikeri and Taranaki nurseries.
If the disease becomes established it could threaten natives such as pohutukawa, rata and manuka, as well as garden plants such feijoa and bottle brush.
Mr Peters said the odds of wind-blown fungus spores from Australia landing on nurseries 600km apart were "astronomical", and it was more likely the fungus had reached New Zealand through a "catastrophic failure of biosecurity".