A common garden plant has hopped the fence and is wreaking havoc on Whakaraupō/Lyttelton Harbour’s native vegetation.
Spur valerian, a cottage garden plant with pink, magenta or white flowers, is spreading across rocky outcrops and coastal cliffs around Banks Peninsula and Lyttelton Harbour.
A serious threat to native plants in Whakaraupō
“Don’t let that pretty splash of pink fool you – spur valerian has no place in our natural environment,” says Christchurch City Council park ranger Di Carter.
“Spur valerian, originally from the Mediterranean, is an aggressive species and a serious threat to the rare native plants that call Whakaraupō home.”
The rocky volcanic bluffs and coastal cliffs of Whakaraupō Harbour and Banks Peninsula are home to many rare and fragile native species found nowhere else in the world. Many of these plants are threatened with extinction from weed invasion.
Spur valerian seeds have blown from gardens around Whakaraupō Harbour. Once in the rocks, it grows into thickets and outcompetes small plants.
Those plants include the Banks Peninsula sun hebe, and the Banks Peninsula forget-me-not which is found naturally around Mount Evans. It is also one of the most threatened species in New Zealand.
Resources in place to control spur valerian
Christchurch City Council and Environment Canterbury have provided resources to help control spur valerian on private land.
The Council’s park rangers are working closely with landowners to prevent spread beyond Whakaraupō and to protect the special plants within the Whakaraupō basin.
The control work covers 18 sites and will run twice a year in spring and autumn, for the next six years.
“Flowering occurs in two main bursts, so control is done in spring and autumn before any flowering plants set seed,” Carter says.
“We need to carry out ongoing survey and control to make sure no new plants are spreading beyond the containment zone.”
Controlling the weed in private gardens
People who wish to keep the plants in their gardens can help reduce the seed volume by:
- removing flowers prior to seeding, or
- removing and replacing the plants with less spreading garden plants, such as lavender or a native like the New Zealand linen flax (Linum monogynum).
Protecting rock outcrop and coastal cliff vegetation
These projects, combined with roadside control to prevent the spread along road corridors beyond Corsair Bay, Governors Bay, Church Bay and Diamond Harbour, and with help from gardeners in the townships of Whakaraupō, will help protect the special rock outcrop and coastal cliff vegetation across the wider Peninsula.