Pseudopanax ferox
Pseudopanax ferox, commonly known as toothed lancewood or horoeka, is a small heteroblastic tree which belongs to the family Araliaceae. It is endemic to New Zealand, and is similar to the more common lancewood, Pseudopanax crassifolius, but with more prominently tooth-shaped leaves. The tree is sometimes called fierce lancewood, in reference to its fierce-looking saw-tooth shaped juvenile leaves.
Description
Pseudopanax ferox is a small heteroblastic plant, similar to P. crassifolius. This means the leaf patterns and growth habits are different depending on its stage of growth.A mature toothed lancewood can reach 6 metres height with a trunk of up to 25 cm in diameter. It is only in adulthood that the tree's shape changes from one central stem and downward growing leaves to a more typical tree shape with branches spreading to build a round head.
Leaves
Seedling leaves of P. Ferox range from colors such as dark to light chocolate brown or almost black.The juvenile leaves are a very dark grey-brown to grey-green colour, narrow, stiff and up to 40 cm long, by 0.6–1.5cm wide. Leaves are also margined with teeth reminiscent of a chainsaw blade, with rounded or serrate lobes. Their grey-green color has a metallic sheen with a prominent reddish midrib. The leaves are all angled downwards, usually about 45º from the trunk.
Once the slow growing tree reaches maturity at 10 to 15 years, the leaf form becomes shorter, wider and dark green in colour. The adult leaves are shorter and wider at 5–15cm by 1–2cm. The adult leaves will have less serrated margins, or even no serration at all.
Trunk
The trunk is slender when juvenile, and develops a more braided and grooved pattern at maturity.For adult trees, the trunk can get up to 25cm in diameter, and develop distinct longitudinal grooves that twist slightly, going along the length of the trunk. The bark is smooth and mottled grey, with the scars of old leaves prominent.
Flowers
The small and inconspicuous flowers are clustered in terminal compound umbels, with 5–12 rays each 3–5 cm long. The flowers, similiar to those of P. crassifolius, are also bisexual, and have roughly 4–5 stamens and 5 styles.Fruit
Compared to P. crassifolius, the fleshy and ovoid fruits of P. ferox are slightly larger in diameter at 8–9 mm. Fruits also appear to be brown or purple-brown when ripe.Taxonomy
The currently accepted name of the species was first described in 1889, by English botanist Thomas Kirk. It was originally referred to as Panax ferox Kirk in 1878, before being transferred to the Pseudopanax genus due to morphological distinctions separating New Zealand Araliaceous plants from the plants that were species of the primarily Asian genus Panax.Etymology
The species epithet ferox derives from Latin for 'fierce' or 'wild', which usually refers to very spiny plants, and alludes to the formidable appearance of P. ferox as a result of its toothed juvenile leaves.Distribution
It has a patchy distribution in the North Island. It is more widespread in the South Island, mainly east of the Main Divide, from the Marlborough Sounds to Southland.Habitat
Pseudopanax ferox thrives in coastal to subalpine areas between above sea level, favoring areas such as sand dunes, grey scrub, alluvial gravels and cliffs. This species typically prefers drier habitats and conditions compared to ''Pseudopanax crassifolius.''Ecology
Phenology and reproduction
The juvenile phase of P. ferox, persists for 15–20 years, when the tree reaches its adult form, the plant forms a slender, unbranched trunk up to several meters tall. Maturity is reached around 20–30 years, when branching begins and leaves transition to shorter, broader adult forms, enabling flower and fruit production.Fruits develop slowly over approximately one year, maturing from autumn through winter into spring, and are primarily dispersed by New Zealand native birds such as the tūī and kererū, which consume them and remove the inhibitory flesh via digestion.