McHughs Forest

McHughs Forest Park is a 43 hectare public recreational reserve on the edge of Darfield town in the Selwyn District of the South Island of New Zealand. It was established in 1893 as a plantation forest for timber and shelter, dominated by Douglas fir but with a mix of other exotic conifers.[1]

McHughs Forest Park was formerly part of the Selwyn Plantation Board’s forest holdings and is now owned by the Selwyn District Council and publicly accessible with a diversity of walking tracks.[1] In 1986 Dereck Rooney described McHughs Forest as "the third-best Douglas fir stand in New Zealand".[2]

Under the planted conifer canopy is extensive natural regeneration of both native and exotic plants which harbour a diversity of animals and fungi.[3] Members of the Canterbury Botanical Society recorded 18 ferns inside McHughs Plantation in 1986, 17 of them indigenous to New Zealand.[2]

43°28′16.7″S 172°5′36.0″E / 43.471306°S 172.093333°E / -43.471306; 172.093333

References

  1. 1 2 "McHughs Forest Park". Sensational Selwyn. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  2. 1 2 Rooney, Dereck (1986). "Conifer and hardwood plantations as a habitat for shrubs and ferns". Journal of the Canterbury Botanical Society. 20: 42–47.
  3. "Species observed in McHughs Forest". NatureWatch NZ. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
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