Otago Daily Times

‘Freak of nature’ still thriving in the depths

- MARJORIE COOK

LURKING 50m below the surface of Otago’s freshwater lakes in a twilight zone are the bryophytes — a freakish and globally rare community of deepwater mosses and liverwort species.

Scientists say the former forest plants appear to have been washed into the alpine lakes eons ago and created a sunless niche.

New Zealand is one of the few places worldwide to support unusual and rare bryophytes that thrive in light levels of less than 1% of the sunlight falling at lake surface.

The plants were first discovered in lakes Wānaka, Hāwea and Wakatipu in the 1980s. Scientists from the Otago Regional Council and Niwa this year embarked on a new survey of the submerged plants, hoping to build on knowledge gained over the decades and establish a regular, threeyear monitoring protocol.

Niwa freshwater ecologist and diver Mary de Winton first studied the plants in the 1990s and returned to the lakes this year for another look.

‘‘I was apprehensi­ve about whether we’d find them again because climate and lake catchments have changed a lot in 30 years, but we were delighted to see the plants still thriving down there.

‘‘Bryophytes are usually found in moist environmen­ts like damp forest floors and shady rock faces, but we saw them in Lakes Wakatipu and Wānaka up to 50m down.

‘‘It’s a really unusual place for them to grow, but we think they were washed into the lakes eons ago and have found a niche in the quiet twilight depths.

‘‘If it wasn’t for the extreme transparen­cy of our lake water, we don’t think this ‘freak of nature’ would have survived,’’ Ms de Winton said.

ORC lakes scientist Hugo Borges said this year’s survey was successful and more work has been planned later this year.

‘‘We haven’t done a full analysis yet, but we successful­ly revisited all sites and found deepwater bryophyte in some of them.

‘‘We used a remotely operated vehicle to explore the lake bed, so have hours of footage to study. This will give us a better understand­ing of the extent of bryophytes coverage, which we can compare to the previous surveys,’’ Mr Borges said.

The two organisati­ons will schedule a dive programme every three years to monitor the submerged plant communitie­s, using this year’s survey as a baseline.

The monitoring programme would be crucial for tracking environmen­tal change, while the depths the plants grow down to would provide an indicator of the longterm clarity of the lakes, Mr Borges said.

‘‘Despite being simple organisms, deepwater bryophytes play a vital role in ecosystem functionin­g by providing habitats, improving water quality and aiding biodiversi­ty.

‘‘They are highly sensitive gauges of water transparen­cy, light transmissi­on, sedimentat­ion rates, temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns and changes in dissolved gases, all of which give us clues into the health of our freshwater environmen­ts,’’ he said.

 ?? PHOTO: NIWA ?? Natures’s freaks . . . Scientists are studying deepwater bryophytes in Otago’s alpine lakes.
PHOTO: NIWA Natures’s freaks . . . Scientists are studying deepwater bryophytes in Otago’s alpine lakes.
 ?? PHOTO: NIWA ?? Thriving in nature . . . Niwa aquatic scientist Mary de Winton is delighted a rare community of liverwort and mosses in Lake Wa¯naka is still there, 30 years after she first saw them near Beacon Point.
PHOTO: NIWA Thriving in nature . . . Niwa aquatic scientist Mary de Winton is delighted a rare community of liverwort and mosses in Lake Wa¯naka is still there, 30 years after she first saw them near Beacon Point.

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