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Sphaeropteris medullaris

Sphaeropteris medullaris, synonym Cyathea medullaris, commonly known as mamaku or black tree fern, is a large tree fern up to 20 m (66 ft) tall with a trunk up to 20 cm diameter at breast height. It is distributed across the south-west Pacific from Fiji to Pitcairn Island and is a common plant found in forests of New Zealand.

Description
(1862) The trunk is black and covered with distinctive hexagonal stipe bases. The fronds may be up to long, and arch upwards from the crown. Dead fronds are shed except in very young plants. The primary pinnae are from to long, and the undersides have scales with spines along their margins. As many as 40,000 leaflets have been counted on a single frond. The stipes are thick, black, very rough to the touch, and are similarly covered in black scales with marginal spines. Sphaeropteris medullaris can be readily distinguished from related species by the hexagonal stipe scars on the trunk, and by the scales with spines on their margins. Fully grown trees can reach a height of , making the species the tallest tree fern found in New Zealand. Sphaeropteris medullaris is one of the fastest growing tree ferns alongside Sphaeropteris excelsa, with both species growing as much as a year. The tree produces a red mucilage when the trunk is cut, which is a non-Newtonian fluid. ==Taxonomy and etymology==
Taxonomy and etymology
The species was first described by German botanist Johann Jakob Bernhardi in 1801 as Sphaeropteris medullaris. The species epithet medullaris means pithy, referring to the white, edible substance found on the inside of the tree fern's trunk. Sources variously refer to the species as Sphaeropteris medullaris or Cyathea medullaris. Sphaeropteris is a clade within the family Cyatheaceae. While some sources prefer a broader definition of the genus Cyathea and treats Sphaeropteris as a sub-genus, the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I) treats Sphaeropteris as a genus separate to Cyathea. The species is referred to as mamaku or mamau in several Polynesian languages, including Māori. Early European settlers to New Zealand referred to the species as black tree fern, or as black mamaku. Other Māori names include katātā, kōrau, and pītau. ==Distribution==
Distribution
The species is found across many southwestern Pacific Ocean islands, including New Zealand, Fiji, the Marquesas Islands, Tahiti, the Austral Islands, and Pitcairn Island. It is not present in the Kermadec Islands. ==Ecology==
Ecology
Sphaeropteris medullaris is a coloniser of disturbed hillside areas in many high humidity forests of New Zealand, a role taken by mānuka and kānuka in many areas of New Zealand. It is likely that mānuka and kānuka only recently became more likely to establish disturbed soil, since the arrival of people to New Zealand, and the impact of fires on native forests. C. medularis is one of the few ferns which sometimes forms pure stands excluding almost all other vegetation. They can grow 50 cm a year "or more". ==Cultivation==
Cultivation
Sphaeropteris medullaris will grow from fresh spores, but this is slow. Plants are easy to transplant when they are young. It is also possible to plant newly felled trunks which will generally sprout again, provided they are watered with care. They are hardy in various conditions once established. ==Uses and traditional culture==
Uses and traditional culture
In traditional Māori culture, the drooping fronds of Sphaeropteris medullaris is associated with grief and sorrow. Traditional stories describe Mamaku and Toroa (the albatross) as human lovers who would argue and bicker. Their arguing angered the gods, who turned Toroa into an albatross, and Mamaku into a tree fern. The plant is also a traditional food source in New Zealand, where both the pith and coiled fern fronds are used. The bark is used to create a taonga pūoro (traditional Māori instrument) called rōria. Tree fern trunks, including those of S. medullaris, have been used as rough building material and also for makeshift trackwork. ==Gallery==
Gallery
Cyathea medullaris.jpg|The black trunk with characteristic hexagonal stipe bases seen here from this specimen from RBGE, Edinburgh Cyathea-med2.jpg|Luxuriant groups are a common sight in the New Zealand forest. fiddlehead black tree fern.jpg|The expanding frond forms a fiddlehead or koru Cyathea medullaris (G.Forst.) Sw. (AM AK274337).jpg|Herbarium specimen of Sphaeropteris medullaris ==References==
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