M Molvray & P Kores: Photos of Wildflowers, Nature, and Biology

Home / New-Zealand / Whangarei-E-Northland / Parihaka-Reserve /

climbing-Metrosideros-in-kauri-grove-Dundas-Ross-track-Parihaka-2017-05-20-IMG 8313

climbing-Metrosideros-in-kauri-grove-Dundas-Ross-track-Parihaka-2017-05-20-IMG_8313.jpg orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181orange-fingerlike-fungus-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-2017-05-02-IMG 8218Thumbnailsorange-gill-mushrooms-Drummond-Track-Parihaka-Whangarei-2017-04-21-IMG 8181

Tiny reddish spots at center top are the climbing Metrosideros, or rata. Very unusual that it's managed to stay attached to a kauri, which usually shed all epiphytes.

IPTC Metadata

iptc_caption
Tiny reddish spots at center top are the climbing Metrosideros, or rata. Very unusual that it's managed to stay attached to a kauri, which usually shed all epiphytes.