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Phormium tenax

Phormium tenax (called flax in New Zealand English; harakeke in Māori; New Zealand flax[1][2] outside New Zealand; and New Zealand hemp[1] in historical nautical contexts) is an evergreen perennial plant native to New Zealand and Norfolk Island that is an important fibre plant and a popular ornamental plant.[3] The plant grows as a clump of long, straplike leaves, up to two metres long, from which arises a much taller flowering shoot, with dramatic yellow or red flowers.[3]

Phormium tenax
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Asphodelaceae
Subfamily: Hemerocallidoideae
Genus: Phormium
Species:
P. tenax
Binomial name
Phormium tenax
Tūī on New Zealand flax

The fibre has been widely used since the arrival of Māori to New Zealand, originally in Māori traditional textiles and also in rope and sail making[4][2] after the arrival of Europeans until at least WWII. It is an invasive species in some of the Pacific Islands and in Australia.[5]

The blades of the plant contain cucurbitacins, which are poisonous to some animals, and some of them are among the bitterest tastes to humans.[6]

Etymology edit

The hara in the Māori name harakeke is a remnant of the Austronesian root *paŋudaN (via Proto-Oceanic *padran) surviving in related languages referring to pandanus plants with similar characteristics of sheathing leaves also used for weaving (like Pandanus tectorius, also known as hala in Hawaiian), as New Zealand was one of the only places where pandanus was not available.[7]

Ecology edit

The jumping spider Trite planiceps lives predominantly in the rolled-up leaves of this species. Phormium tenax is a coastal cover plant associated with significant habitat such as the breeding habitat for the endangered yellow-eyed penguin.[8]

Māori traditional uses edit

New Zealand flax was one of the most commonly used fibres for weaving prior to European contact in New Zealand, due to its wide availability and long strands.[9] Harakeke can be woven raw to create open-weave items (where the para or the waterproof epidermis of the plant is kept intact), or processed so only the muka remains, for close-weave objects.[9] The broad length of harakeke leaves allow weavers to create a variety of strip lengths, making the plant suitable for a range of objects and sizes.[9]

In pre-European society, Māori had specific plantations of flax, which was their most important textile. It was prepared by cutting the green leaves close to the base before the leaves were split and woven. Various preparations of the leaves allowed the material to be used both as a hardy flat thick-woven material (as in kete and mats) and also as a fibrous twine, used for creating both rope and finely woven cloaks.

Harakeke can be boiled with hot stones to bleach strips, however dying the fibre is difficult due to the water resistant para.[9] However, harakeke can by dyed using paru,[10] or an iron-rich mud.[9] Harakeke can be made more flexible with less shrinkage using the hapine technique, where a knife or shell is run across the fibre to remove moisture without breaking the surface layers.[9][11]

Cultivation edit

Phormium tenax had many uses in traditional Māori society. It was the main material used for weaving, adopted after aute (paper mulberry), the traditional tree used to create fabric in Polynesia, did not thrive in New Zealand's "Scientific Plant Breeding" climate.[12] Many of the traditional uses have largely fallen into disuse, though there is an upswing in the use of traditional materials in modern Māori art and craft. The two most common forms for flax in traditional craft are the use of stripped, dried leaves as broad bands, such as in the weaving of kete (flax baskets), and the scraping, pounding, and washing of the leaves to create a fibre — muka — which is used in tāniko (weaving) of soft, durable fabric for clothing. Flax is also used as a decorative and structural element in tukutuku, panelling found within Mãori wharenui (meeting houses).

 
A worker feeding a flax leaf into a stripper, circa 1910.

Prior to the Great Depression of the 1930s, which decimated flax as an industry, there were two serious attempts by Europeans to breed for fibre. The first was by Wellington-based Leonard Cockayne about 1908.[13] The second by Massey-based John Stuart Yeates in the late 1920s.[14][15] More recently research led by Xiaowen Yuan at Massey University has investigated the use of novel composite materials made from flax fibre to improve supercapacitor performance.[16]

New Zealand Flax was cultivated on Saint Helena from the late 1800s to around 1966 for the production of string and rope and for export.[17] Today the plants remain but the industry has stopped; they are considered an ecological problem.[18]

Ornamental edit

In recent times, P. tenax and its cousin P. colensoi have been widely cultivated as ornamental garden plants, their striking fans of pointed leaves providing a focal point in mixed plantings or at the edge of a lawn. They are easy to grow in a sunny spot, especially in coastal areas with some protection in winter, but require reliably moist soil. They are frequently found in garden centres amongst plants with a similar appearance, notably Yucca and Cordyline. However, these are very different plants with different requirements. P. tenax and some cultivars can grow to a substantial size - 4 m (13 ft) tall by 2 m (7 ft) broad.[19]

Cultivars edit

 
Phormium 'Amazing Red'

More recently several cultivars have been selected as decorative garden plants, including:[20]

  • 'Bronze Baby' - arching bronze leaves, 2-to-3-foot (0.61 to 0.91 m) plant.
  • 'Dazzler' - arching leaves that are bronze-maroon with red and pink stripes, plant reaches 3 feet in height
  • 'Duet'agm[21]
  • Purpureum Group agm[22]
  • 'Sundowner'agm[23] - 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) plant, leaves are striped with bronze, green and rose-pink
  • 'Variegatum'agm[24]
  • 'Yellow Wave'agm[25]

Those marked agm have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Phormium tenax". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  2. ^ a b Chitham, Karl (2019). Crafting Aotearoa : a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania. Kolokesa Uafā Māhina-Tuai, Damian Skinner, Rigel Sorzano. Wellington, New Zealand: Te Papa Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-9941362-7-5. OCLC 1118996645.
  3. ^ a b Roger Holmes and Lance Walheim. 2005. California Home Landscaping, Creative Homeowner Press ISBN 978-1-58011-254-3
  4. ^ "Our Flax for the Navy | NZETC".
  5. ^ "Phormium tenax (PIER species info)". Pacific Island Ecosystems at Risk (PIER). 9 January 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  6. ^ Kupchan, S.Morris; Meshulam, Haim; Sneden, Albert T. (1978). "New cucurbitacins from Phormium tenax and Marah oreganus". Phytochemistry. 17 (4): 767–769. Bibcode:1978PChem..17..767K. doi:10.1016/S0031-9422(00)94223-7.
  7. ^ "Proto-Polynesian Etymologies: *Fara". Te Mära Reo: The Language Garden. Benton Family Trust. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  8. ^ C. Michael, Hogan (April 6, 2009). "Yellow-eyed Penguin (EN)-Megadyptes antipodes(Hombron & Jacquinot, 1841)". IgoTerra. from the original on 2 August 2015.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Mckendry, Lisa (2020). "Māori archaeological textiles: a structural analysis of Māori raranga 'woven' basketry from the Waitakere Ranges in Auckland Museum". Records of the Auckland Museum. 55: 19–28. doi:10.32912/RAM.2020.55.2. ISSN 1174-9202. JSTOR 27008990. S2CID 229659991. Wikidata Q106827316.
  10. ^ Chitham, Karl (2019). Crafting Aotearoa : a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania. Kolokesa Uafā Māhina-Tuai, Damian Skinner, Rigel Sorzano. Wellington, New Zealand: Te Papa Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-9941362-7-5. OCLC 1118996645.
  11. ^ McCallum, R. E., & Carr, D. J. (2012). Identification and use of plant material for the manufacture of New Zealand indigenous woven objects. Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 10, 185-198.
  12. ^ Tamarapa, Awhina (2011). Māori Cloaks. Te Papa Press. ISBN 978-1-877385-56-8.
  13. ^ "Scientific Plant Bredding". Dominion. Vol. 1, no. 191. 7 May 1908. p. 7.
  14. ^ "Progress Made - Various Investigations". Evening Post. Vol. 108, no. 150. 21 December 1929.
  15. ^ "Valuable Work Done". Evening Post. Vol. 110, no. 71. 20 September 1930.
  16. ^ "Massey researchers awarded more than $13 million in MBIE funding". www.massey.ac.nz. Retrieved 2024-02-10.
  17. ^ "The Flax Industry | Saint Helena Island Info: All about St Helena, in the South Atlantic Ocean".
  18. ^ "Endemic Species | Saint Helena Island Info: All about St Helena, in the South Atlantic Ocean".
  19. ^ RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 978-1405332965.
  20. ^ Frances Tenenbaum. 2003. "Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants", Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 0-618-22644-3
  21. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Phormium 'Duet'". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  22. ^ "Phormium tenax Purpureum Group". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  23. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Phormium 'Sundowner'". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  24. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Phormium tenax 'Variegatum'". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  25. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Phormium 'Yellow Wave'". Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  26. ^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 78. Retrieved 25 April 2018.

Further reading edit

  • James Hector. 1889. Phormium tenax as a fibrous plant, second edition, New Zealand. Geological Survey Dept, New Zealand, published by G. Didsbury, Government Printer, 95 pages

External links edit

  • Harakeke image gallery from Landcare Research - Manaaki Whenua

phormium, tenax, called, flax, zealand, english, harakeke, māori, zealand, flax, outside, zealand, zealand, hemp, historical, nautical, contexts, evergreen, perennial, plant, native, zealand, norfolk, island, that, important, fibre, plant, popular, ornamental,. Phormium tenax called flax in New Zealand English harakeke in Maori New Zealand flax 1 2 outside New Zealand and New Zealand hemp 1 in historical nautical contexts is an evergreen perennial plant native to New Zealand and Norfolk Island that is an important fibre plant and a popular ornamental plant 3 The plant grows as a clump of long straplike leaves up to two metres long from which arises a much taller flowering shoot with dramatic yellow or red flowers 3 Phormium tenax Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Monocots Order Asparagales Family Asphodelaceae Subfamily Hemerocallidoideae Genus Phormium Species P tenax Binomial name Phormium tenaxJ R Forst amp G Forst Tui on New Zealand flax The fibre has been widely used since the arrival of Maori to New Zealand originally in Maori traditional textiles and also in rope and sail making 4 2 after the arrival of Europeans until at least WWII It is an invasive species in some of the Pacific Islands and in Australia 5 The blades of the plant contain cucurbitacins which are poisonous to some animals and some of them are among the bitterest tastes to humans 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Ecology 3 Maori traditional uses 4 Cultivation 4 1 Ornamental 4 2 Cultivars 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymology editThe hara in the Maori name harakeke is a remnant of the Austronesian root paŋudaN via Proto Oceanic padran surviving in related languages referring to pandanus plants with similar characteristics of sheathing leaves also used for weaving like Pandanus tectorius also known as hala in Hawaiian as New Zealand was one of the only places where pandanus was not available 7 Ecology editThe jumping spider Trite planiceps lives predominantly in the rolled up leaves of this species Phormium tenax is a coastal cover plant associated with significant habitat such as the breeding habitat for the endangered yellow eyed penguin 8 Maori traditional uses editFurther information Flax in New Zealand New Zealand flax was one of the most commonly used fibres for weaving prior to European contact in New Zealand due to its wide availability and long strands 9 Harakeke can be woven raw to create open weave items where the para or the waterproof epidermis of the plant is kept intact or processed so only the muka remains for close weave objects 9 The broad length of harakeke leaves allow weavers to create a variety of strip lengths making the plant suitable for a range of objects and sizes 9 In pre European society Maori had specific plantations of flax which was their most important textile It was prepared by cutting the green leaves close to the base before the leaves were split and woven Various preparations of the leaves allowed the material to be used both as a hardy flat thick woven material as in kete and mats and also as a fibrous twine used for creating both rope and finely woven cloaks Harakeke can be boiled with hot stones to bleach strips however dying the fibre is difficult due to the water resistant para 9 However harakeke can by dyed using paru 10 or an iron rich mud 9 Harakeke can be made more flexible with less shrinkage using the hapine technique where a knife or shell is run across the fibre to remove moisture without breaking the surface layers 9 11 Cultivation editPhormium tenax had many uses in traditional Maori society It was the main material used for weaving adopted after aute paper mulberry the traditional tree used to create fabric in Polynesia did not thrive in New Zealand s Scientific Plant Breeding climate 12 Many of the traditional uses have largely fallen into disuse though there is an upswing in the use of traditional materials in modern Maori art and craft The two most common forms for flax in traditional craft are the use of stripped dried leaves as broad bands such as in the weaving of kete flax baskets and the scraping pounding and washing of the leaves to create a fibre muka which is used in taniko weaving of soft durable fabric for clothing Flax is also used as a decorative and structural element in tukutuku panelling found within Maori wharenui meeting houses nbsp A worker feeding a flax leaf into a stripper circa 1910 Prior to the Great Depression of the 1930s which decimated flax as an industry there were two serious attempts by Europeans to breed for fibre The first was by Wellington based Leonard Cockayne about 1908 13 The second by Massey based John Stuart Yeates in the late 1920s 14 15 More recently research led by Xiaowen Yuan at Massey University has investigated the use of novel composite materials made from flax fibre to improve supercapacitor performance 16 New Zealand Flax was cultivated on Saint Helena from the late 1800s to around 1966 for the production of string and rope and for export 17 Today the plants remain but the industry has stopped they are considered an ecological problem 18 Ornamental edit In recent times P tenax and its cousin P colensoi have been widely cultivated as ornamental garden plants their striking fans of pointed leaves providing a focal point in mixed plantings or at the edge of a lawn They are easy to grow in a sunny spot especially in coastal areas with some protection in winter but require reliably moist soil They are frequently found in garden centres amongst plants with a similar appearance notably Yucca and Cordyline However these are very different plants with different requirements P tenax and some cultivars can grow to a substantial size 4 m 13 ft tall by 2 m 7 ft broad 19 Cultivars edit nbsp Phormium Amazing Red More recently several cultivars have been selected as decorative garden plants including 20 Bronze Baby arching bronze leaves 2 to 3 foot 0 61 to 0 91 m plant Dazzler arching leaves that are bronze maroon with red and pink stripes plant reaches 3 feet in height Duet agm 21 Purpureum Group agm 22 Sundowner agm 23 6 foot tall 1 8 m plant leaves are striped with bronze green and rose pink Variegatum agm 24 Yellow Wave agm 25 Those marked agm have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 26 See also editPhormium covering both species Flax in New ZealandReferences edit a b Phormium tenax Germplasm Resources Information Network Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved 18 December 2017 a b Chitham Karl 2019 Crafting Aotearoa a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania Kolokesa Uafa Mahina Tuai Damian Skinner Rigel Sorzano Wellington New Zealand Te Papa Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 9941362 7 5 OCLC 1118996645 a b Roger Holmes and Lance Walheim 2005 California Home Landscaping Creative Homeowner Press ISBN 978 1 58011 254 3 Our Flax for the Navy NZETC Phormium tenax PIER species info Pacific Island Ecosystems at Risk PIER 9 January 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2012 Kupchan S Morris Meshulam Haim Sneden Albert T 1978 New cucurbitacins from Phormium tenax and Marah oreganus Phytochemistry 17 4 767 769 Bibcode 1978PChem 17 767K doi 10 1016 S0031 9422 00 94223 7 Proto Polynesian Etymologies Fara Te Mara Reo The Language Garden Benton Family Trust Retrieved 15 January 2019 C Michael Hogan April 6 2009 Yellow eyed Penguin EN Megadyptes antipodes Hombron amp Jacquinot 1841 IgoTerra Archived from the original on 2 August 2015 a b c d e f Mckendry Lisa 2020 Maori archaeological textiles a structural analysis of Maori raranga woven basketry from the Waitakere Ranges in Auckland Museum Records of the Auckland Museum 55 19 28 doi 10 32912 RAM 2020 55 2 ISSN 1174 9202 JSTOR 27008990 S2CID 229659991 Wikidata Q106827316 Chitham Karl 2019 Crafting Aotearoa a cultural history of making in New Zealand and the wider Moana Oceania Kolokesa Uafa Mahina Tuai Damian Skinner Rigel Sorzano Wellington New Zealand Te Papa Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 9941362 7 5 OCLC 1118996645 McCallum R E amp Carr D J 2012 Identification and use of plant material for the manufacture of New Zealand indigenous woven objects Ethnobotany Research and Applications 10 185 198 Tamarapa Awhina 2011 Maori Cloaks Te Papa Press ISBN 978 1 877385 56 8 Scientific Plant Bredding Dominion Vol 1 no 191 7 May 1908 p 7 Progress Made Various Investigations Evening Post Vol 108 no 150 21 December 1929 Valuable Work Done Evening Post Vol 110 no 71 20 September 1930 Massey researchers awarded more than 13 million in MBIE funding www massey ac nz Retrieved 2024 02 10 The Flax Industry Saint Helena Island Info All about St Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean Endemic Species Saint Helena Island Info All about St Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean RHS A Z encyclopedia of garden plants United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley 2008 p 1136 ISBN 978 1405332965 Frances Tenenbaum 2003 Taylor s Encyclopedia of Garden Plants Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 0 618 22644 3 RHS Plant Selector Phormium Duet Retrieved 6 February 2021 Phormium tenax Purpureum Group RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Phormium Sundowner Retrieved 6 February 2021 RHS Plant Selector Phormium tenax Variegatum Retrieved 6 February 2021 RHS Plant Selector Phormium Yellow Wave Retrieved 6 February 2021 AGM Plants Ornamental PDF Royal Horticultural Society July 2017 p 78 Retrieved 25 April 2018 Further reading editJames Hector 1889 Phormium tenax as a fibrous plant second edition New Zealand Geological Survey Dept New Zealand published by G Didsbury Government Printer 95 pagesExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phormium tenax Harakeke image gallery from Landcare Research Manaaki Whenua Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phormium tenax amp oldid 1218988248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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