Monday, June 8, 2009

Glowworm Caves



We stayed two nights in Queenstown and than drove farther south of the South Island of New Zealand to the lake cities of Te Anau, Manapouri, and Milford Sounds as well as the Fiordland National Park, the most beautiful park in New Zealand. After having lunch in Te Anau, we traveled 20km for an hour hike along Lake Manapouri, the controversial lake that sparked environmental awareness in New Zealand in the 1950s and gave birth to the Green Party. At 7pm, we had dinner at The Moose Restaurant and took a boat cruise about 20 minutes to see the Te Anau glowworms. Situated in Fiordland National Park, the Te Anau Glowworms Caves are part of the World Heritage Area. These caves are surrounded by rainforest and predator-controlled habitats for native birds only found in New Zealand. The Glowworm Caves are couple of thousand years old. The Maori prehistoric name for Te Anau is translated as “caves with current of swirling waters.” We navigated through the electrifying caves full of live in small boats carried by roaring waters into the dark silent glowworm caverns. These caves serve as shelters to some of New Zealand’s beautiful native species including the glowworms of the underworld that have never ceased to amaze tourists and students. The glowworms caves are about four level limestones disarranged and fairly young in ecological environment but are carved up to several million years. Compared to a lot of other caves, these caves are continuously escalating in dimension due to the production of acids from carbon dioxide that comes from forest floor high above the caves’ surface. The acids help dissolve the rock and create passage. We saw examples of how the water wears away the ancient limestone when we passed a waterfall and natural sandstone bridge leading into the caves.
The luminous lights of the glowworm larvae attract flying insects by their gluey threads that hang from their nests. The hungrier the glowworms, the brighter they glow. The glowworm’s light is produced as a by-product of excretion. A reaction takes place in a small tube near the tail between an enzyme called luciferase, and other chemicals, produce a blue-green light. Because glowworms react to light and noise by switching off, we were cautioned not to make sounds, take photographs or videotape in the caves. My immediate reaction upon seeing the brilliant lights of glowworms was, “Oh my God.” I couldn’t stop but appreciate more of the biodiversity, ecology and geology of New Zealand.



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