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Pirita

Mistletoe

Loranthaceae

Their Story

Pirita — leafy native mistletoes — once filled New Zealand’s beech forest canopies with bright blooms. These parasitic plants live attached to large host trees and rely on nectar-feeding birds like korimako and tūī for pollination and seed dispersal. However, they have declined dramatically throughout Aotearoa. The Sanctuary offers refuge to surviving populations of mistletoes, giving visitors the chance to spot these rare forest gems.

Mistletoes are recognised by their pendulous clusters of leaves hanging high among the canopy of their host trees. The green and white mistletoes have small, generalised flowers, and are hosted by a wide range of trees. The red, yellow and scarlet mistletoes have large and bright flowers that are highly specialised for bird pollination. These three species are generally only found on beech trees. brooksanctuary.org.nz

The beech mistletoes can grow high in the canopy, often unnoticed unless in flower. Their flowers remain closed unless opened and pollinated by certain endemic birds and bees. Mistletoes are also exclusively dispersed by birds as their sticky seeds need to be excreted onto a suitable host branch. brooksanctuary.org.nz+1

The beech mistletoes flower around Christmas; and fruit throughout Autumn, sometimes all the way up into Spring. When the seed germinate, a root emerges and plunges into its host, plunging into the xylem tissue that is responsible for carrying water from the roots to the leaves. The mistletoe uses its leaves to create sugars in order to grow. Mistletoes are generally as long lived as their hosts, some probably reaching one hundred years old.  brooksanctuary.org.nz

The distribution of mistletoes was linked to the distribution of their hosts, with the beech mistletoes most common in the South island where the most extensive beech forests occurred. The other two species were broadly distributed in broadleaf and coastal habitats where a wide range of hosts grew. One species was endemic to the North Island and has now become extinct. Mistletoes are currently distributed in places where they could survive, often in high altitude forests. At the Sanctuary, green mistletoes are relatively common in lowland forest. Yellow, red and scarlet mistletoes are recovering in small pockets. Tāpia, white mistletoe, has been reintroduced into the Sanctuary in the regenerating bush.

Pirita is under threat from browsing by introduced mammals—particularly the brushtail possum—and from the widespread loss of their pollinators. All species except for green mistletoe are considered at risk of extinction, with one species already gone.  

Brook Waimārama is uniquely positioned to protect these species, being primarily beech forest and populated with huge numbers of korimako and tūī which both pollinate and disperse mistletoes. The sheer size of the Sanctuary allows for restoration of native flora at a massive scale, protecting plant communities at a wide range of altitudes, where different species of beech and mistletoes occur. Here, mistletoes will slowly become as conspicuous as they once were.

🪶 The māori name pirita is shared among all the Loranthaceous mistletoes as well as the supplejack vine(Ripogonium scandens). The word is derived from ‘pilita’, the polynesian word for yams. There are around seven other māori names referring to mistletoes and their flowers.

Download the fact sheet PDF here

Our other residents

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Volunteers are the backbone of the Sanctuary and donations, supporter fees, sponsorships allow us to continue our journey protecting the Sanctuary environment and building a place for rare and endangered New Zealand flora and fauna to thrive.

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Win prizes for your best summer photo at the Sanctuary 📸🏆☀️

This season, we want to see the Sanctuary through your lens — the bright light through the canopy, the textures of the forest floor, and the tiny details that make summer feel alive.

Enter our Summer Photography Competition (part of our Sanctuary Seasons series) and you could win:

🏆 Instant camera (Junior Photography winner)
 🌙 Family ticket to a guided night tour
 📰 Feature in our newsletter + social media
 🖼️ Printed display at the Visitor Centre

📅 Entries close 28 February - Submit your entries via our website: Link in bio

Photo credit: Helen Power - Entry from the spring photography competition

#BrookWaimāramaSanctuary #SanctuarySeasons #Ngahere #NaturePhotography #NZWildlife #NelsonTasman #VisitNelson #NZHikes #EcoTourismNZ #ConservationStorytelling
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Two cute to be true?

Brook Waimārama Sanctuary and @savethekiwinz teams have been busy over the past few days tracking and recapturing kiwi to remove their transmitters. Thanks to a huge team effort, all ten males were recaptured within just three days.

Some nest burrows held a surprise or two — in several cases a female was present, and a couple even contained chicks. One burrow amazed us all, with not one but two adorable chicks 😍

All chicks are fully independent at this stage of the season, and after quick health checks and transmitter removal, all adult kiwi were safely returned to their burrows.

This special footage was captured by kiwi handler Tamsin from Save the Kiwi, who led the transmitter removal mahi.

We estimate the 20 females and 21 males released in May last year have already produced around 10–15 kiwi pukupuku (little spotted kiwi) chicks in their very first breeding season — a strong sign the habitat is just right.

With transmitters now removed from all ten males, the kiwi are completely free, with no further handling needed. Annual kiwi call counts by staff and volunteers will help track the growing population across our 690 ha, ring-fenced, pest-free sanctuary.

Credit: Video courtesy of Tamsin Ward-Smith, Save the Kiwi

Thanks to our partnership with @terunangaotoa Ngati Toa and Save the Kiwi

 #kiwipukupuku #littlespottedkiwi #brookwaimaramasanctuary #nelson #thetopofthesouth #conservation #biodiversity #nativebirds #natureloversnz #newzealandwildlife #pestfree #ringfencedsanctuary #conservationinaction
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🎻 45 min string quartet concert at Brook Waimārama Sanctuary

Come and hear a dynamic young string quartet perform a 45 min concert at Brook Waimārama Sanctuary. We welcome everyone to come along, and bring anyone you think might be curious to hear some classical music in a relaxed environment.

The @antipodes.quartet is part of the Fellowship Ensemble Programme, a joint venture between the @adamchambermusicfestival, @newzealandstringquartet and @chambermusicnz, as a career-development experience offered to four of this country’s most promising young string players.

The Antipodes Quartet are Eden Annesley (violin), Mana Waiariki (violin), Tal Amoore (viola) and Lavinnia Rae (cello).

On this occasion, Brook Waimārama Sanctuary are welcoming everyone at local prices: Adult $15, Child $9; Family $35 (on the door)

Find out more: (Link in bio)

#BrookWaimāramaSanctuary #NelsonNZ #Whakatū #WhatsonNelson #NelsonTasman #LiveMusicNZ #ChamberMusicNZ #StringQuartet #ClassicalMusicNZ #AdamChamberMusicFestival #NewZealandStringQuartet #ChamberMusicNewZealand #FamilyFriendly #NatureAndCulture #SupportLocalArts
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STRATEGIC SUPPORTERS

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CONSERVATION CHAMPIONS

Come Visit Us!

651 Brook St, The Brook
Nelson 7010
New Zealand

(03) 539 4920

info@brooksanctuary.org.nz

OPEN HOURS

Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9am – 5pm*
Wednesday: 9am – 5pm*
Thursday: 9am – 5pm*
Friday: 9am – 5pm*
Saturday: 9am – 5pm*
Sunday: 9am – 5pm*

The Sanctuary is open on all public holidays except Christmas Day.
*Last entry 4pm

PUBLIC TRANSPORT

NBus route 4 visits the Brook Sanctuary 6 days a week and departs from Nelson Airport. Click here for full timetable

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