Otepatotu Scenic Reserve is a public scenic reserve on Banks Peninsula, New Zealand, between Akaroa and Le Bons Bay. It has a stand of regenerating mountain tà Âtara (Podocarpus laetus) considered to be one of the finest remaining on Banks Peninsula.
This reserve is situated in eastern Banks Peninsula, next to the Summit Road, from Akaroa. The car park at the base of the reserve is approximately above sea level, and a loop track climbs steeply to Lavericks Peak, high. A spur leads to a rocky outcrop lookout with a view over Akaroa Harbour. A flat area below Lavericks Peak is bordered by vertical basalt cliffs. The reserve's soil is a combination of loess and granular loam derived from volcanic bedrock.
The reserve is in the Akaroa Ecological District, and is mostly south-facing, receiving high levels of southerly rain and occasional snow, and being sheltered from the dry prevailing nor'wester. Additional moisture comes from year-round cloud around the peaks of the Akaroa crater.
The MÃÂori name for the area, , translates roughly as "place of the fairies". MÃÂori tradition held that the peak was the home both of (wild men) and (light-skinned fairy folk). Tëtë (muttonbirds) once nested near the peak but were exterminated by the patupaiarehe. The name Laverick may refer to a Captain Laverick of the schooner Look In who supplied whaling stations in the 1840s. The name "Otepatotu" has been commonly used to refer to both the peak and the land as far down as what is now known as Lavericks Bay.
In 1930, of land beside Lavericks Peak was set aside as Otepatotu Scenic Reserve and the area was fenced and gorse cleared. In 1980 this was joined by of neighbouring land, and a small reserve at Tysons Knob back along the Summit Road. The two main blocks of the reserve were separated by a grassed road, formerly a stock-droving track connecting the Summit Road with Lavericks Ridge.
In 1973 the cliffs at Otepatotu were first visited by recreational rock climbers, and Tim Wethey was given permission to publish a guide to the "fine and unique climbing" at the site. By the 1980s a collection of routes were in common use on each of the three main buttresses, which were valued for their compact, knobby rock. After the 2011 Christchurch earthquake Otepatotu became a popular climbing destination because it was easily accessible and had escaped damage, unlike many sites in the Port Hills, and many new climbing routes were established; over 100 now exist on the three buttresses and main cliff wall.
Otepatotu is notable primarily for its remnant of old-growth mountain tà Âtara (Podocarpus laetus) forest, which is considered one of the finest remaining on Banks Peninsula. The trees are festooned with lichens (Usnea sp.) and hanging goblin moss (Weymouthia sp.), which gives it the appearance of a "goblin forest". Second-growth forest trees include tree fuchsia / kotukutuku (Fuchsia excorticata), broadleaf / kÃÂpuka (Griselinia littoralis), mÃÂhoe (Melicytus ramiflorus), and abundant mountain five-finger (Pseudopanax colensoi). Tà Âtara and other forest trees continue to regenerate at the reserve edges.
The reserve has a large number of species that are uncommon, rare, or very localised on Banks Peninsula, including the clubmoss Phlegmariurus varius, the mountain holly Olearia ilicifolia, climbing groundsel (Brachyglottis sciadophila), and a notable population of tà Âë / mountain cabbage tree (Cordyline indivisa), one of the highest concentrations on the Peninsula. The open shrubland outside the forest contains the endemic Banks Peninsula hebe Veronica strictissima, which is classified as At Risk - Naturally Uncommon, as well as mountain flax / wharariki (Phormium colensoi) and old tà Âtara logs.
Riflemen / titipounamu (Acanthisitta chloris), otherwise uncommon in the Akaroa ecological district, have been recorded at Otepatotu. Brown creeper / Pëpipi (Mohoua novaeseelandiae), South Island tomtit (Petroica macrocephala), bellbird / korimako (Anthornis melanura), and kererà « (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae) are also present.
The endemic Banks Peninsula carabid Mecodema howittii and tree wÃÂtÃÂ Hemideina ricta, both classed as At Risk, occur here, as well as the uncommon six-eyed spider Periegops suterii and an undescribed species of Holcaspis carabid beetle endemic to Banks Peninsula.