Prumnopitys ferruginea. Miro.
Previous names
Podocarpus ferrugineus
Māori names
Common names
miro, black pine (State Conservator of Forests 1877), black rue pine (Buchanan)
Food
"... the flavour is rather bitter but very aromatic, resembling that of the nutmeg, it is the favourite food of the Kereru or wood pigeon." (Taylor 1847)
"the fruit is like a plum of a spicy flavour" (Taylor 1870)
The aromatic fruit "imparts an agreeable taste to the pigeon when it is in season." (Taylor 1855)
Red berries used for food (Colenso 1868a ; Kirk, in Taylor 1870).
Berries eaten raw (Tunuku Karetai in Beattie MS 582/E/11, Hocken Library)
Dyes
Brown dye (Wall, Cranwell 1943)
Domestic
Bark occasionally used to make small water vessels (W. Baucke. cited in Best 1942).
Best doubts that Māori would have barked and destroyed any miro tree that provided food for birds, they were highly prized. "... possibly they selected for barking, the toa, as he (Baucke) calls them, male trees that did not bear fruit.").
Wallace found 2 kō and 1 wakahuia made from miro among museum artefacts he tested.
Construction
Timber tree. Carpentry. (Details on colonial timber uses generally not recorded in this database)
Scent
Miro oil is one of the compounds in the scent "taramea" (Brett's Guide 1883)
Medicinal
Gum used as inhalant (White 1887).
Gum used for ulcers, wounds (Goldie 1904).
Aromatic gum heated as inhalant for bronchitis (Faulkner 1958).
Suggested use during World War II of miro gum as a styptic (Wall, Cranwell 1943).
Oil from flesh of drupes given to patients recovering from fever (Goldie 1904 ; Brett's Guide 1883 ; Adams 1945)
Weak infusion of the bark for stomach-ache (Kerry-Nicholls 1886 ; Taylor 1870).
Leaves and bark used in decoction for gonorrhoea (Tūhoe) (Goldie 1904 ; Best 1906).
Used as antiseptic by bushmen (K. Pickmere; unpublished notes on Botany Division files, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Christchurch 1940. Now in National Archives).
Bark used medicinally (Best 1907)
Oil applied as insecticide (Goldie 1905 ; Brett's Guide 1883)
Chemistry
Oil occasionally expressed from the berries (Best 1942)
Chemical constituents listed in Cambie 1976, 1988 with references. (Essential oils, tannins, diterpenoids).
Notes
Māori claim to recognize two sexes (Best 1942)