Arthropodium cirratum
Arthropodium cirratum commonly known as rengarenga, renga lily, New Zealand rock lily, or maikaika, is a species of herbaceous perennial plant, endemic to New Zealand, where it may once have been farmed. It is used for medicine as well as food, and has symbolic importance in traditional MÄori culture.
The MÄori name rengarenga is a reduplication of Proto-Polynesian *renga which in other related languages corresponds to turmeric, especially its powdered form ; this association is due to both plants' similar stem and root characteristics.
Description
The leaves are long and wide. The flower stalk often reaches one metre, and bears many white six-petalled flowers, in groups of two or three, each about across. The stamens are tricoloured - purple and white, with yellow at the curled end. The roots are wide.
Taxonomy
It was first described in 1786 as Anthericum cirrhatum by Georg Forster. In 1822, Robert [Brown (botanist, born 1773)|Robert Brown] assigned it to the genus, Arthropodium, resulting in the name, ''Arthropodium cirrhatum ''
Distribution and habitat
It occurs naturally north of Greymouth and KaikÅura near the sea and, as the name suggests, usually on rocks.
Cultivation and uses
It is often grown as an ornamental plant. The rhizomes are edible when cooked and can be found throughout the year. The rhizomes were once eaten by the MÄori after being cooked in a hÄngÄ«. William Colenso believed, for two reasons, that this plant was once cultivated by them: firstly, the plant grows much larger under cultivation than it usually does in the wild; and secondly it was often found near old deserted MÄori homes and plantations. However, he lists it as only fourteenth in importance, in his list of eighteen kinds of wild vegetable food used by the MÄori.