Hi Robyn, my observations are that it is invasive in Northland, but limited by insufficient dispersal of seed. Only kereru (kuku or kukupa in Te Tai Tokerau) are capable of eating the fruit, but observations of it feeding on karaka are rare. I hypothesise in my PhD thesis that karaka is not indigenous to NZ because of this lack of dispersal and it morphological and genetic similarity to a New Caledonian species C. disimilis. I did discuss this hypothesis briefly with Brian Molloy (who has looked at how karaka was transported in NZ) who strongly disagrees. I do plan on publishing my work which shows the difference in recruitment between other large fruited species and karaka on Northland offshore island groups with and without kukupa. The species is undoubtedly spread throughout NZ by people, and while this is mainly reasoned for the southern distribution, the same reasoning can be used for Northland populations.