Latitude Magazine

Something Fishy

- WORDS Annie Studholme

With its smelly reputation and equally

unimpressi­ve looks, the critically endangered

New Zealand fish guts plant will likely

never make it on a tourism poster or a

commemorat­ive stamp. Still, this curious little

plant deserves our attention.

COMMONLY REFERRED TO AS NEW ZEALAND FISH

guts, Chenopodiu­m detestans is a native flowering plant only found on the South Island. It hails from the Amaranthac­eae family of plants that includes spinach, beet, amaranth and quinoa.

Around the world, Chenopodiu­ms are known as extreme sur vivalists, inhabiting some of the harshest environmen­ts, including the Andes, Himalayas and Atacama Desert. And the New Zealand fish guts are no different, acclimatis­ing to live in the most extreme conditions. Historical­ly found between Otago and Canterbury, today only three known population­s are surviving at Lake Lyndon, Twizel and Lake Tekapo.

Until five years ago, few Kiwis had even heard of New Zealand fish guts, let alone seen or smelled one. That all changed in 2017 when the Department of Conservati­on (DOC) developed an algorithm to identify priority species for management. The New Zealand fish guts plant found itself in the top 150. Almost overnight, the little-known New Zealand fish guts plant was on the map. For DOC’s threatened plant ranger Daniel Kimber (Danny), it hadn’t come soon enough, with the Lake Lyndon population (which he looks after) narrowly hanging on by a thread. ‘Yeah, they stink, and they’re ugly, but the plants they live with are massively diverse and really special. Lake Lyndon is a hotbed of biodiversi­ty. I have 17 different plants [species] that I look after, and no less than 11 are in the Waimakarir­i Basin.’

English-born botanist Thomas Kirk first recorded New Zealand fish guts at Lake Lyndon as early as 1877, but it wasn’t seen again for more than 100 years. In the1980s, they had managed to narrow it down to an area of one square kilometre. Thought to be extinct, the next time it surfaced was in 2010.

Danny set up monitoring lines in the lake in 2020, but lake levels have remained too high for the past couple of years due to weather conditions. The last time the plant was spotted was in February last year (2021). ‘They are weird. There is so much we don’t know about them, not helped by the fact that they don’t seem to pop up every year. When they do pop up, it ’s very exciting. It gives us a short window to learn about them. One rain event and they’re gone,’ explains Danny.

‘What we know is that it’s a strange little plant that lives on lake shores, clay and salt pans. It needs seasonal flooding to prepare its muddy floor habitat and possibly set its seed for germinatio­n. If the lakes stay high and their habitat stays covered by water, they cannot grow. The seed will sit dormant for decades waiting for their chance.’

Their lifecycle seems totally dependent on water levels, he says. ‘They are an annual – living, breathing and dying all in the space of less than a month. Once they emerge, they quickly grow, flower and produce seed, then die. Hopefully, before the water retakes its habitat.

‘But what we don’t know is why sometimes the water resides with the right habitat, and they don’t emerge. There has got to be something fish guts need; it’s not just about exposure. Otherwise, you would expect to see heaps of them when the lake drops, and it’s not like that. We think there is some dormancy period for this plant.’

From the seed they’ve collected and grown successful­ly at the DOC nursery at Motukarara, Danny says they’ve noticed that the fresher the seed, the worse the germinatio­n. The best germinatio­n results came from seeds sitting in a plastic bag on a desk for six years.

The gaps in germinatio­n make monitoring them more difficult. They’re also hampered by plants not always coming up in previously known locations as the seed is moved by wind and the water direction, says Danny.

However, the Lake Tekapo population tends to come up in the same spot with more regularity which they assume has something to do with the lake’s water levels being more universal depending on power usage. Still, in reality, they don’t know if that has an effect or not, notes Danny.

Unfortunat­ely, there is no getting away from the pungent smell for which the plant is named. ‘It literally smells like rotting fish, which it omits from all parts of the plant,’ he says. ‘Often, you can smell the plant before seeing it in the right conditions while monitoring. And if you touch it, the smell stays with you until you can wash your hands and clothes.’

It’s so bad that when the nursery successful­ly grew them, their excitement quickly turned to dismay when they started

‘Often, you can smell the plant before seeing it in the right conditions while monitoring.’

producing seeds and stinking out their entire building. ‘I quickly got a phone call to come and collect them asap,’ laughs Danny. But while the smell is clearly not its most endearing quality, it has its benefits. For example, helping to attract flies and other insects for pollinatio­n and as an adaption to ward off potential browsers, like native ducks and geese.

The New Zealand fish guts plant is also unique because it produces a spongy protective covering all over the leaves, flowers and seeds called a ‘bloom’. The blooms are modified hairs that act like bladders. Like with other members of the Chenopodiu­m family, it’s thought the blooms work as a salt removal mechanism allowing salt inside the plant to be removed and released outside the plant, allowing it to exploit high salt environmen­ts.

Danny says the water levels are not the only problem threatenin­g the survival of the New Zealand fish guts plant. The main issue is habitat degradatio­n caused by the invasion of exotic weeds, which outcompete for the same habitat, and four-wheel drive vehicles ripping up the precious habitat. Powerboats also put enormous human pressure on the lake during the summer months. ‘The water acts as weed control. But once it resides, everything takes its chance [to grow], and our problem is that often the weeds are faster to get going than the natives are. Bring in the disturbanc­e from people, and it swings even more in favour of the exotic weeds.’

DOC has worked with Environmen­t Canterbury and Selwyn District Council to fence off the area surroundin­g Lake Lyndon to protect fish guts habitat from vehicles. Management of the site is focused on reducing weed competitio­n, says Danny. One idea is to use a lawn mower to remove the cover of weeds, allowing light gaps for fish guts to grow and stopping the weeds from flowering and seeding. It’s hoped over time the exotic weeds like scentless daisy will die out, leaving room for the fish guts population to expand.

The main issue is habitat degradatio­n caused by the invasion of exotic weeds, which outcompete for the same habitat.

 ?? ?? TOP Lake Lyndon is a hotbed of special plants that live alongside the New Zealand fish guts plant including the Myosotis brevis flower (left) and Veronica lilliputia­na Tarn Speedwell which is also ‘At Risk Declining’. Photos Jane Gosden, DOC. ABOVE LEFT The New Zealand fish guts plant showing off its ‘bloom’. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC. ABOVE RIGHT The New Zealand fish guts plant. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC.
TOP Lake Lyndon is a hotbed of special plants that live alongside the New Zealand fish guts plant including the Myosotis brevis flower (left) and Veronica lilliputia­na Tarn Speedwell which is also ‘At Risk Declining’. Photos Jane Gosden, DOC. ABOVE LEFT The New Zealand fish guts plant showing off its ‘bloom’. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC. ABOVE RIGHT The New Zealand fish guts plant. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC.
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 ?? ?? Department of Conservati­on threatened plant ranger Daniel (Danny) Kimber. Photo Annie Studholme. Department of Conservati­on rangers undertakin­g New Zealand fish guts plant monitoring at Lake Lyndon last summer. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC.
Department of Conservati­on threatened plant ranger Daniel (Danny) Kimber. Photo Annie Studholme. Department of Conservati­on rangers undertakin­g New Zealand fish guts plant monitoring at Lake Lyndon last summer. Photo Jane Gosden, DOC.
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 ?? ?? ABOVE It's hoped when the lake levels at Lake Lyndon recede this summer, monitoring of the New Zealand fish guts plant can continue. Photo Annie Studholme.
ABOVE It's hoped when the lake levels at Lake Lyndon recede this summer, monitoring of the New Zealand fish guts plant can continue. Photo Annie Studholme.

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