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Overview
Nancy Adams was one of New Zealand’s most prolific botanists, and a talented artist. She produced a vast number of botanical illustrations, which were included in widely-distributed and well-regarded books about New Zealand flora. One of these books is New Zealand Native Trees, a field guide published across two books as part of the ‘Mobil New Zealand Nature Series’.
In her introduction to New Zealand Native Trees (1), Adams provides beautiful and comprehensive descriptions of the three types of New Zealand forest - podocarp-mixed broafleaf, kauri, and beech - suggesting which species of tree may be found there and on which level of the forest they might grow. She also describes the growth of native trees in areas other than the forest, on farmland, riparian areas and coasts, writing:
To make a study of native trees does not mean an excursion to remote and untouched areas of forest. Throughout New Zealand there are many large and small patches and pockets of native vegetation where a number of different trees may be seen.
The 35 species described in this book are illustrated with their own watercolour plates which depict the fully grown tree, the young tree, a branch of adult foliage, and an enlargement of the tree’s reproductive structures (i.e flowers, fruit or seed cones). These helpful visual guides are accompanied by rich and engaging text describing the trees’ appearance, reproductive patterns, and habitat preferences. These descriptions evoke both the precise scientific accuracy and the warm, often whimsical accessibility that was also the hallmark of Adams’ illustrative style.
In her description of pukatea, she writes:
"PUKATEA is a tall spreading tree reaching 35m (14 f) in height with a smooth dark grey bark. The base of the trunk develops widely flanged buttresses. Pukatea grows where the drainage is poor and in swampy forest. Young trees ore symmetrical in outline and often have bright yellow- green folioge. The leaves are shiny, bright green and have evenly toothed margins; the midrib ond veins are inconspicuous. The branchlets are four-angled and often dark purple. Pukatea flowers are small and borne on short racemes. The fruits are flask-shaped and split to release the silky seeds. Pukatea is found in the North Island and the north of the South Island."