Carpodetus serratus


Carpodetus serratus, commonly known as marbleleaf and putaputawētā, is a species of tree in the family Rousseaceae. It is endemic to New Zealand; its range mainly covers the North, South, and Stewart Islands. The species is commonly found on river banks and the margins of forests. It is a monoecious tree reaching up to in height. Its young stage is a divaricating tangled shrub with branchlets arranged in a zig-zag pattern.
Carpodetus serratus was first described in 1776 by the German naturalists Georg and Johann Reinhold Forster. Pollination is likely achieved by insects, but the tree is potentially capable of self-pollination. The tree often has holes in the trunk which is a result of being tunnelled by pūriri moths. These tunnels are then inhabited by wētā, hence the Māori name putaputawētā referring to wētā many emerging. European settlers valued the tree, the wood had multiple uses as a timber, and the flowers were a competitor to being the country's national flower. C. serratuss 2023 conservation status in the New Zealand Threat Classification System was "Not Threatened".

Description

Carpodetus serratus is a species of monoecious tree up to tall. The trunk is slender, up to long, and the bark is corky, mottled, grey-white in colour, and often knobbly due to insect tunnelling. The wood is white and is open in the grain.
Juvenile C. serratus plants exhibit a divaricating tangled shrub characteristic with branchlets arranged in a zig-zag pattern. Leaves are marbled, ovate to nearly round in character, dark green in colour, thin, slightly leathery, and the margins are finely toothed. C. serratus exhibits heteroblasty in leaf and branch form. Juvenile leaves are 10–30 mm × 10–20 mm long. Adult leaves are 40–60 mm × 20–30 mm long. The petioles are about 10 mm long.
Flowers are arranged in panicles at branchlet tips. Flowering occurs from November to March. These panicles can reach up to 50 × 50 mm long and the flowers can reach 5–6 mm in diameter. The petals are white, ovate, and 3–4 mm long. The stigma is cap-shaped with a dark tip. Fruits are found in capsules, 4–6 mm long, and black at maturity. January and Februrary appear to be the fruiting season, although dried fruit can be present throughout the year as they may take a year to mature. The seeds are small, only about 1–2 mm long.
Carpodetus serratus contains several chemical compounds, including, kaempferol, leucodelphinidin, polyphenols, quercetin, as well as the triterpene lupeol. C. serratus has a diploid chromosome count of 30.

Taxonomy

Carpodetus serratus was first described in 1776 by the German naturalists Georg and Johann Reinhold Forster.
Carpodetus has been included in several different families, including, Saxifragaceae, Escalloniaceae, and Rousseaceae. C. serratus has two synonyms, C. dentatus and C. forsteri, described by Jean Louis Marie Poiret and Josef August Schultes, respectively. There are eleven species of the Carpodetus genus currently accepted by the Plants of the World Online taxonomic database. These species are native to islands in the Pacific: New Guinea, New Zealand, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.

Etymology

The etymology of C. serratuss genus name, Carpodetus, comes from the Greek καρπο-δέτης which means 'bound-fruit' or 'fruit bound together'. The specific epithet, serratus, means 'saw-toothed'. The species is commonly known as marbleleaf, putaputawētā, and piripiriwhata. The New Zealand botanist Thomas Kirk noted that European settlers referred to the tree as 'mapau', 'white mapau', 'white maple', and 'white birch'.

Ecology

The fruits are dispersed by fruit-eating animals, such as birds. Burrows recorded that C. serratus fruits were consumed by silvereyes. They are also eaten by New Zealand bellbirds and North Island kōkako, which compete for the fruits from possums. The divaricating tangled characteristic of the tree may have prevented the leaves from being eaten by the extinct moa, but the fruit was eaten by them. The kererū eat both the fruits and leaves.
The tree trunks are often tunneled by the caterpillars of the pūriri moths. After abondening these holes that the caterpillars produce, the holes are then inhabited by wētā or tunnelweb spiders. Caterpillars of the forest semilooper moths are also hosted on the leaves. Several genera of gall mites have been discovered to be hosted on the tree. The native mistletoe tāpia can be present parasitically on the tree. C. serratus has low flammability rates.

Pollination

Carpodetus serratus is monoecious, meaning individual trees are either hermaphroditic or female. The white petals of the tree have a sweet scent, which is believed to attract insects for pollination. George Thomson, a botanist, reported in an 1881 source that C. serratus is pollinated by insects entirely. A further source from 2007 reported introduced and native bees, from the genus Leioproctus, as visitors to the flowers. In 1978, the botanist Brenda Shore experimented pollinating flowers by hand, and concluded bisexual flowers are potentially capable of producing seeds from self-pollination.

Distribution

Carpodetus serratus is endemic to New Zealand; its range mainly covers the North, South, and Stewart Islands. Despite its widespread distribution throughout the country, the plant rarely occurs in large quantities. The genus Carpodetus was thought to be restricted to New Zealand, but other species have since been discovered in Papuasia, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. The northern limit of C. serratus is either Mangōnui or Cape Reinga. The southern limit is Stewart Island. The 2023 assessment of C. serratus in the New Zealand Threat Classification System was "Not Threatened".

Habitat

Carpodetus serratus typically inhabits coastal to montane environments, reaching in maximum altitude. It is commonly found in broadleaf forests, beech forests, and commonly occurs as part of secondary forest. It inhabits streamsides and forest margins. C. serratus grows best in areas with variable light. C. serratus commonly associates with wineberry. C. serratus is moderately frost-resistant and can withstand dry soils, although it prefers to grow in soils that are deep and well-drained.

Uses

Carpodetus serratus has several Māori names, including, kai-wētā, putaputawētā, punawētā, putāwētā, piripiriwhata, and piripiri wata. The name putaputawētā refers to many wētā emerging. Other variations of the name of the plant often refer to wētā, or spleenworts of the genus Asplenium, which is piripiri in Māori. The wood of C. serratus is white and open in the grain. Evidence presented by museum artefacts suggest a teka was made from C. serratus wood.
The timber is not suitable for sawmilling, although it did have use in cabinetmaking and timber for handles of axes and other tools. It has also been used for fence nails and other similar purposes. The wood is not durable when it is in contact with the ground. The wood contains too much sap to be suitable for use as firewood, which earned it the nickname "bucket-of-water tree", a name shared with kōtukutuku and rewarewa. The New Zealand botanist Leonard Cockayne believed that the flowers of C. serratus were a strong competitor to being the country's national flower.

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