Open SpaceTM magazine
Check out the QEII Open Space magazine, March 2010 (PDF 2.5MB)
Download March 2010 articles:
Gisborne: Fencing a water catchment
Tararua: Replacing ineffective fencing
Covenants protecting Olearia shrubland and moths dependent on Olearia shrubs
Forest fragments: Objectives of restoration and management
Kaharoa Kokako: Amplifying New Zealand's original song
Find out more about Open Space magazine ....
Next issue: Late July 2010
QEII covenants benefit both mistletoes and their host trees
Mistletoes are an iconic feature of the Nelson area but have now declined to tiny fragments (except for Ileostylus which is still common in some areas).
They are an indicator of the natural environment's condition. Protecting forest with QEII covenants helps to improve the environment for mistletoes by excluding stock, controlling possums and providing healthy surroundings for new host tree seedlings to flourish.
Above: Scarlet mistletoe Peraxilla colensoi on silver beech in the 2.8ha beech-podocarp forest open space covenant of Peter Clausen and Sue Rewcastle at Dovedale, inland Nelson. Photo: Philip Lissaman
Right: Old silver beech trees and scarlet mistletoes are features of the Hyatt & Sons Limited 640ha Life of Trees covenant in Korere.
If beech regeneration is poor for any reason, for example, lack of parent trees or drought, then the start to regeneration is planting seedlings of the appropriate species for the area.
Nurseries may have eco-sourced plants or it may be possible to collect seedlings from strongly regenerating places.
This forest covenant was a source of silver beech seedlings for a 'start' of a mistletoe project; 400 seedlings from here have been planted in areas where beech is not regenerating and these may be seeded with mistletoe in 5-8 years time.
Above: The seedlings shown here are the ideal size for collection to be grown on in a nursery. Photo: Philip Lissaman
Above: Scarlet mistletoe is a recent find in the 3.5ha beech forest remnant in Tadmor protected by Harry and Joan Hancock. Photo: Philip Lissaman
Above: White mistletoe Tupeia antarctica on marbleleaf (putaputaweta) in a lowland primary forest remnant in Dovedale, inland Nelson.
Protected with a 10.6ha QEII covenant in June 2007 by Ian Hannen and Elaine Newman, the remnant contains three mistletoe species and is possibly the best fruiting source in the area for collecting white mistletoe seeds. Photo: Philip Lissaman
Download a mistletoe conservation fact sheet (PDF 431KB) with tips on collecting and planting mistletoe seeds, identifying beech trees, and common host trees for each mistletoe species.
Find out more about stemming the decline in beech mistletoes ...
Open SpaceTM Magazine No. 73 July 2008 © QEII National Trust
Support QEII Trust
What's New
- Sir Brian Lochore thanks Nelson and Tasman covenantors
- 2010 QEII Athol Patterson Bursary awarded
- Landcare Research - your input requested on pest management
- New brochure: Protecting wetlands with QEII covenants
- Carbon credits
Kiwi at Tui Glen

Looking after kiwi at Tui Glen farm near Whangarei.
Find out more about this covenant.
Brochures
![]() |
Frequently asked questions about open space covenants |
![]() |
Assisting landowners to protect special features on their land Download PDF, 222KB |
![]() |
QEII covenants: Protecting and enhancing wetlands on private land |





.jpg)