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English Pages [442] Year 2016
GROWING
HAWAITS NATIVE PLANTS A SIMPLE STEP-BY-STEP
APPROACH
FOR EVERY SPECIES
KERIN
E.
LILLEENG-ROSENBERGER
|
GROWING
HAWAITS NATIVE
PLANTS
GROWING
HAWATTS NATIVE A SIMPLE
STEP-BY-STEP
Kerin
Melany
E. H.
PLANTS APPROACH
FOR
EVERY
Lilleeng-Rosenberger Chapin,
MUTUAL
Consulting
PUBLISHIN
Editor
SPECIES
© 2005
Copyright New
by Mutual Publishing copyright © 2016 by Mutual
edition
No part of this book
by
any
electronic
information without
except
written
brief
be
means,
may
form
including
devices or systems,
permission
passages
in any
reproduced
and retrieval
storage
prior that
may
mechanical
or
Publishing
be
from
the
publisher,
quoted
for reviews.
All
rights
ISBN-13:
reserved
978-1939487-71-1
Design by Emily R. Lee background image © Nantela | Dreamstime.com Spine image © Andreykuzmin | Dreamstime.com
Cover
First
Printing (new edition),
Mutual 1215
Publishing, Center
Honolulu,
December
LLC
Street, Suite 210 Hawai‘i
Ph: 808-732-1709
96816 / Fax:
E-mail:
808-734-4094
[email protected] www.mutualpublishing.com Printed
in South
Korea
2016
or
DEDICATION I dedicate
for all of her
‘Eke
bog
—
W.
Maui—
this
book
magical creations,
to
and
the
to those
of Mother who
Nature,
strive
to
editing
and
story of the demise
updating of the
GHNP
for this
NOTE third
edition,
continually saddened plants. They are declining I’m
unique native Hawaiian lack of knowledge and respect of the existing native in Hawai‘i habitats Entire have been and are altered from ecosystems being agriculture It is time
and
to
hold
stopping
them.
preserve
KRW
AUTHORS While
spirit
many
the worst future
blatant
offenders
financially
destruction
of what
accountable is left.
for When
and
restoring planet
the
around
& cultural
what is sick
by
the
from the
the
world.
practices. is restoreable so
are
we.
TABLE
CONTENTS
OF xi
Foreword
xii
Preface
xiv
Acknowledgments Introduction
xv
*
Seed
¢
Recommended
¢
Containers
¢
e
PART ONE: THE
|!
BASICS
¢
=
NATIVE
OF
PLANT
HAWAIIAN
¢
PROPAGATION
e
¢
e
¢
3
SEEDS
COLLECTING
Fleshy or pulpy fruits Dry fruits (seeds) Keeping records and labeling
*
¢
¢
¢
SEEDS
Fleshy pulpy Dry fruits (seeds) Cleaning seeds manually
STORING ¢
¢
SEEDS
6
¢
seeds
Pregermination soaking
8
OF
OF
SEEDS
treatments
12
12
Water
13
°
Scarification
14
¢
Acid
¢
No
pretreatment
Cuttings layering Ghaing
Air
20
25 27
(FERN) 28
Collecting spores Starting spores Transplanting and
28 28
media
29
31
MANAGEMENT
32 = 32
Snags Piece ate and
¢
Pest
¢
Container and
¢
scarification
19
20
oe aes
:
PROPAGATION
¢
PROPAGATION
(CLONAL)
GREENHOUSE
8
Temperature
PRETREATMENT
fertilizers
7
8
METHODS
media
GREENHOUSE
8
Desiccation
Short-lived
|
and
7
° ¢
and
Nutrition
PTERIDOPHYTE
5
mix
6
fruits
or
Sowing seeds regimes Seedling care Transplanting
PROPAGATION
5
mixes
Water
4
¢
_ hye
seed
4
¢
CLEANING
potting
ASEXUAL ¢
PREPARATION SEED
16
GERMINATION
7 .
disease
management
33
production
maintenance
33
TRANSPLANTING
Cuscutaceae
138
Cyperaceae
140
Droseraceae
144
Ebenaceae
146
36
Elaeocarpaceae Epacridaceae
150
AND
OUTPLANTING
335
TRANSPLANTING
AND
OUTPLANTING
148
¢
Location
36
Ericaceae
152
¢
Soil
36
Euphorbiaceae
154
e
Site
36
Fabaceae
167
¢
Nutrition
37
Flacourtiaceae
196
Gentianaceae
198 200
PEST ¢
Pest
e¢
Weed
preparation preparation and
fertilizers
CONTROL
38
Geraniaceae
management management
38
Gesneriaceae
202
41
Goodeniaceae
205
NATIVE PART Two: HAWAIIAN PLANT PROFILES AND
PROPAGATION
"TECHNIQUES BY FAMILY AND
GENERA
Gunneraceae
208
Hydrangeaceae Hydrocharitaceae Hydrophyllaceae
210
214
Iridaceae
216
Joinvilleaceae Juncaceae
220
Lamiaceae
222
Lauraceae
230
Liliaceae
234
Loganiaceae
238
212
218
Malvaceae
240
Menispermaceae
256
Moraceae
258
50
Myoporaceae Myrsinaceae Myrtaceae Nyctaginaceae
260
Apiaceae Apocynaceae Aquifoliaceae
52
Oleaceae
277
56
Orchidaceae
279
64
Pandanaceae
282
Araliaceae Arecaceae Asteraceae
66
286
108
Papaveraceae Phytolaccaceae Piperaceae Pittosporaceae Plantaginaceae Plumbaginaceae
110
Poaceae
302 306
44
Agavaceae Aizoaceae Amaranthaceae Anacardiaceae
Begoniaceae Boraginaceae Brassicaceae Campanulaceae Capparaceae Caryophyllaceae Celastraceae Chenopodiaceae Convolvulaceae Cucurbitaceae
46 48 &
74
78 102 104 f
wv
262 266 273
288
290 295
298 300
118
Polygonaceae
120
Portulacaceae
308
124
Primulaceae
310
126
Ranunculaceae
312
128
Rhamnaceae
314
136
Rosaceae
320
Rubiaceae
Rutaceae Santalaceae Sapindaceae Sapotaceae Scrophulariaceae Smilacaceae Solanaceae Theaceae
Thymelaeaceae
328
351 356
366 368 370 377 379
Urticaceae Verbenaceae
Violaceae
398
Zygophyllaceae
|
INDEXES
AND
362
382
Viscaceae
APPENDICES,CITATIONS,
344
396
403
405
Appendix I: Abbreviations Appendix II: Geographic Information Appendix III: Pests and Diseases Appendix IV: Guide to Abbreviations Identifying Photographers Index
Family
Index
Genera
Index
Hawaiian
410
411
the
413 414
and
Names
About
409
412
Citations General
408
415 Common
Plant
Index
418
Author
422
FOREWORD There
be few
can
need
places
propagation the
for
program Islands.
Hawaiian
with
earth
on
of the native
for conservation
the
greater
a
flora, and for
species, than two-year period
rare
During holding the McBryde Chair at the National in Hawai’‘i, I had the Garden Tropical Botanical to become familiar with, and conopportunity cerned about, the fascinating flora of the islands. The
of
evolution
a
flora
native
a
of 1,029
(1,175
of
update) species flowering plants from the original approximately 270 arrivals makes for Hawai‘i a living laboratory evolutionary has happened studies. The real tragedy is what to these plants through the destruction of habitat and colonization alien invasive by species. So species are reduced many of the surviving native 2012
to
few
so
the
individuals
This
tain.
makes
The
and
has
821 of the 1,191
book
also
shows
carried
was
National
of Kaua‘i.
It
essential
and
possible
reintroduced
for
of botanical
of
nurseries
conservation
that
propagation niques used to secure produce cuttings.
the
in the Lawa‘i
the
families.
not
of
the in
to
In addition Part
about
rare
wild.
This
detail
the
germination In
a
work,
few the
cases
author
be
can
of
manual
many of seeds
tech-
where
these
has
or
to
even
books many from temperate
wealth
of other
a
and
discussed, and
interest
about
this
of
Hawai'i.
here book
the
value
Since
relatives
in many
appear
likely to be of tropical plants far beyond
Here to
use
alike, whether
is
is
a
volume
that
of the
parts to
use
will
the
of the
propa-
shores
of
be of consid-
and
conservationists amateur
propagation relatively
but
regions,
tropical plants.
treated
species tropics,
erable
and
species
about
group
are
about
gators
Two
information
includes
potential
Part
volume.
plants
few
wher-
species
direct
each the
and
plants,
individual
to
Two
increases
thereby
of
propagation specifics for
information
of
propagate
individuals
more
KRW
propagation,
of this
grafting. The Pteridophytes or ferns are discussed separately, since propagation from is from seeds. Part One spores quite different contains a great deal of general information resorted
about
provides
This
of the author’s
Garden
population
so
into
do
here.
of the role
Botanical
covers
methods
Whether
is included
the
O‘ahu—
Kapolei,
There
the
increase
ever
of Hawai‘i.
in
4
an
for much
out
Tropical
valley is
flowering impressive update) (Wagner et al.
the value
in conservation,
gardens work
of Hawaiian
2012
(1,386
knowl-
extensive
cultivated
plant species the plant rare,
or
uncer-
specifically to plants most
Hawaiian
accumulated
edge on the propagation plants and ferns, and has
common
is
useful.
author
1999) native
future
their
devoted
of native
propagation
welcome
that
book
a
gardeners
professional.
or
to
Professor
Sir Ghillean
Scientific former
Director,
Director,
Royal
Prance, The
Botanic
Eden
FRS, VMH
Project
Gardens,
and Kew
eeee eyNels the
In
of 1968,
winter
of
island
Hawai‘i,
scented ous
shades
ever
seen,
rainbow.
were
then
I knew
air
that
the
on
Michigan. I was delicately
flowers.
unlike
of green were and the flowers
Hilo,
to
Detroit,
immediately that the with the fragrance of
noticed
the
I moved
from
The
anything of every new
my
variI had
color
in
home
unique.
was
I wanted
know
to
Plants
saw!
how
have
everything I me. My first
to grow fascinated
always horticulture Hawaiian was experience with and Dracaena cutti (Cordyline) plants growing in of water for houseplants, not tings gallon jars knowing they were going to develop roots. Nearly twenty years later, in 1986, I started of the National volunteering at the nursery Garden on Botanical (NTBG) Kaua’i, Tropical from around the world where unusual plants are grown, along with an array of local favorites for fundraising plant sales. The proceeds from used to buy more these sales were nursery supat the and to fund special projects garden. plies After a year or so of being taught the fundamentals — sowing seeds, starting cuttings, air layerand ing, grafting —I was put in charge of plant propagation. I wanted to learn more about the plants around me: their how to identify them, and names, which
ones
in
Enrolling Identification
community plants and lot
of the
Hawai‘i At
to
the Hawaiian in
courses
and
Plant
Tropical Propagation at
Islands.
Plant Kaua’‘i
about introduced college, I learned I realized that Soon, origins. I had were native thought plants their
were
the
native
were
a
to
time,
I volunteered
to
Hawaiian
Valley,
SP
Maui—
gardeners’ success growing their With plants. my knowledge of adopted involved in plant the fundamental principles for propagation, I came up with simple methods native Hawaiian for the plants growing healthy give-away. In October 1989, an opportunity came my way the Hawai‘i Plant Conservation Center. through to
vey
gauge
native
It
not.
help grow plants for the Plant of the a Month program, community outreach proin initiated 1988 gram through the NTBG visitor center. This program awaresought to increase ness of native Hawaiian plants by providing a free plant, along with a plant information sheet to local gardeners, and following up with a surnative
same
Waihee
was
a
funded
by grant a
T. MacArthur
I
shade
the
established
John a
at
D. and
center
resource
for
understanding plants. put in charge of
NTBG,
Catherine
how
for
to prop-
Hawaiian
hired
was
thur
and
native
Hawaiian
was
from
Foundation:
information
agate
that
program
and
plant
nursery,
The grant money. house, was located
built
the
with
new
the
an nursery, in the Lawa’‘i
native MacAr-
open-air Valley of
zones
to
opportunity species that NTBG’s
species fully outplanted. the
Native
flowers
of the
Malvaceae
in Kerin’s
family growing
and
of Kaua‘i.
island at
was
distinct
though plants from
neither
instructions
from
been
cultivation
before.
propagation
of native
Hawaiian
well
were
documented but
never
I found
plants
understood.
or
myths,
many
guides had
plants
in
grown
seeds,
reference
nor
follow; the majority of these
not
nursery of the
plant communities alpine vegetation zones. provided with a variety of native
was
the
all
to
but had to
the
Hawaiian
coastal I
I grew
level,
sea
Even
few
reliable
Undetected learner”
For
than
more
ten
ments, materials.
of
what
results.
Eventually, filled
From
under
Forestry research
direction
Natural
and
Wildlife
horticultural and
rare
m) in
base-yard. into
Koke’e,
We
for
the
the
University of Department
of the
of
Division
Resources, (DLNR-DOFAW)
as
a
specialist responsible endangered Kaua‘i plants site
nursery and at the
outplanted
enclosures
gath-
for
mid-elevation
(1,000 cies
the
and
propagating
plant helped
successful
I worked
erected
these
at
3,000
DOFAW
threatened
in various
in the
and
held
which
these
over
thrived
safe
havens.
I
the
1950’s, I back
to
labeled
was
in first
“a slow
for
feet
Lihu’e
spe-
vegetation
obstacles
most
overcome
and
of
I had
knowledge
through 2002, Corporation of
Land
a
the
the
to
propa-
outplanted
grade lacking reading and writing skills. My challenges dealing with dyslexia have compelled me to become which has helped patient and tenacious me
treat-
notebooks.
2000
Hawai'i
in
contributed
fourteen
Research
of
had
with
experimented cutting
seeds, and
along with many other types I kept detailed records, which
identify ered
I
years,
potting mixes,
we
in
information.
different
all,
opportunity to participate complete cycle, from collecting seed in the wild, and saw of to outplanting many to flower and fruit. these plants mature I would like to recognize myself and others born with dyslexia (Definition: A learning disorder marked by impairment of the ability to and words). recognize comprehend written
that
sources
enclo-
in the
was
There
in
species,
had
the
In the
plants were grazing browsing All
within
—KLR
yard
many success-
or
animals.
126
were
native
safe from
gated
outplanting help of col-
volunteers,
of these
sures,
cool,
of Koke’e
the
and
leagues
at
nurs-
the
in
other
With
many
elevation
thrived
twelve
sites.
the
struggled
environment
misty and
grow
had
lower
yet
ery,
I had
Kaua‘i.
on
this
in
life, like
my
book!
writing editing I thought that writing a book was far beyond now as I write this, I my capabilities and, even am with this struggling very time-consuming And I am grateful for modern-day spell process. check! Growing and caring for plants and animals in nature has always been my greatest passion
and
This
salvation.
book
mulated
methods results. grow
the
that I also
and
care
I have
knowledge
years.
have
I want
to
brought make
the
successful
me
it fun
accu-
share
and
simple to native for Hawai‘i’s plants in the I have where possible, given pri-
want
landscape, and ority to effective ods. I hope you and
the
presents
over
to
low-tech will
find
and
low-cost
this
volume
meth-
helpful
informative.
PREFACE
®
xiii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I want
to
thank
sincerely
George Rosenberger,
for his endless
loving husband, positive encouragement my
of this
process I
and
P. Perlman
Steve
the
Ghillean
Professor Sir
entire
Prance,
FRS, VMH
book.
thanks
give special
to Michael
L. Bornhorst
and
support
throughout
Heidi
Noreen
_
O'Toole
for the genercontribution that
ous
made
it
to
possible
have
the many colored images in this book, all representing uniquely beautiful My warmest with
editing
This
this
Michael
Hawaiian Aloha
excellence
Land
edition. made
studies
without state
the
would
Hawai‘i
States
these
National
(US) also
efforts.
Garden
The
study vation
to
partners
project, and of gratitude
been
and
express my deepest appreciation for kind and effort of these people, who
generously this
include both
to
Without
their
an
Herbarium,
and
the
Smithsonian
to the
of
success
would
have
not
Adams
and
Many contributed
the list below
the
Hawai‘i
the continuation individuals to the
and success
Botanical Plant of this conser-
of this
complete. A debt is extended to the following indilisted viduals, alphabetically, who played key roles in my research on the propagation of native Hawaiian plants. is not
been
images
plant
every
genus Hawaiian
the
to
to
quest
my
possible.
C. H. Lamoureux
L,Bornhorst Heidi Boynton S.
Paul Clark Captain Michelle Conant Dr.Sheila Jim Denny 5s
i
Rosenberger «(george Forestand KimStarr -»
Natalia Tangalin
Sean
Peter Townsend
Dr, Dr.ArtWhistler REM RW
Gleason.
Tropical
beautiful
efforts,
image representing and indigenous
Clarke»...
Herbarium
the
endemic
Islands
Jesse
contributed
book.
Nature
many private indilandowners. The
and
time
David
Parks, The
contributed
enabled
Center
succeed.
have
National
(NTBG)
Conservation
Conservation.
State
to
Wildlife
Plant
possible permits provided by the
Conservancy viduals, organizations, Bernice P. Bishop Museum United
and
Fish
States
of Hawai‘i,
Institution
Catherine
for Appreciation Department of Division of Forestry
for not
and
access
of Hawai‘i,
the
the
Resources,
Wildlife; the United Service; and the Center
D. and
John to
and
These
Pascual
the
in
possible through
extended
and Natural
in
Marty assisting
H. Lorence
Anne E.O'Malley I want
and
Lynette
and
donations of the generous T. MacArthur Foundation.
funding
genera.
to
time
was
is also
O’Toole
Noreen
Grace
third
research
and
the
for their
Troutner
Dr. David
Robert Hobdy ome Fire J oc Kathleen Johnson Thanks
also
Randy Yokoyama
to
the
Natural
Resources,
Wildlife
for
propagating, unique plants The DOFAW Galen
crew
Kawakami
Craig Koga
cen
nnnene
the and
of
Department Division
of
unforgettable outplanting in
Land
Forestry experience the
Pettys Augusto Ruaboro
Stafford Soto Alan
Silva
and of
wild, these
of Hawai’i. Edwin
and
INTRODUCTION WHAT
DID
AND
HOW
The
Hawaiian
from
its
in the
other
many drifted
THEY
GET
world
islands
beneath
the
nected
to
how
and
has
other
land
unique they become
did
isolated
islands
that
of
seafloor, any
respective continents,
result
flora
Hawai’‘i’s
isolated
most
1) p.409). Unlike island chains, which
and
the
is
the
of Hawai’i’s
the
sible, float
for
seeds
or
the best
losing example
did
arrive,
and
to
these
adapted
years
ago,
KLR
seeds—
islands
arose
seeds
and
larly. Many seeds, and
dust-like,
ing
and
from
spores
the
stream,
the
have
exceptionally long freezing temperatures
ferns,
six
sea
arrived
million
regu-
and pollens are spores, drift in the can airborne
for
stream
of
be posable to
without
ger-
Beach
viability. plants this special adaptation of
(Scaevola
have
small
lichens,
Mucuna
of the fruits
some
rials
and
sp.)
or
their
on
dis-
(wave
contain
trapped
hairs
coarse
seeds
corky
mate-
air, while
others
seed
called
coats
(for example, Gossypium tomentosum),
that allowing them to float. It is also believed seeds that could not float plants with individual arrived a in called which by process rafting,
WIND
the
be
of lava?
tomentose
Since
must
con-
how
So
buoyancy:
dispersed
to
in seawater
their
floating
event
rare
plant parts
or
Wiliwili, beach naupaka persed )— KLR
Wind
arrived
plants
this
distances
long
minating are
native
For
currents.
ocean
activity been
never
well
in
Hawaiian
volcanic
fauna
and so
the
mass.
WATER
Some
nearly 2,500 miles
((Plate
from their away evidence indicates geologic
Archi-pelago
PLANTS,
HERE?
Archipelago, neighbor, is
nearest
landmass
HAWAIIAN
ENDEMIC
ARE
mosses,
distances.
of and
tiny jet
great
storms
plant,
which
to
a
may
new
have
other
or
then
events
drifts
home.
Some
also
arrived
in
large vegetative
insects on
the
uproot and
small
rafting plants.
Surviv-
the even
high jet some
in this fashion. An flowering plants arrived is the lehua Ghi‘a (Metrosideros example polymorpha), which is a pioneer species, usually the first to become established on new lava flows along with ferns. Ohi‘a lehua seeds are still dispersed in this way and, unfortunately, so are of the many exotic plants that have more recently become naturalized and weedy in Hawai'i.
Kaua’i's back—
blind KLR
cave
wolf
spider
with
babies
on
her
entire mats
animals
WING
Birds,
of seed
seeds
may barbed
small their
to
the
are
been
or
small,
ancestors
wet-forest
were
these
to
wing.
The
their
feet,
whose
plants,
attractive
(Campanulaceae, brought to
Droseraceae),
on
seeds
still
are
birds
the
on
Hawai’‘i’s
to
Gesneriaceae, Hawai‘i
by
20-30
percent
these
incredible
most
in mud
the
may have attached seeds may have been carried and excreted on arrival. Many
seeded,
textures
native
arrival stuck
sticky
or
stomachs
of the
for the
dispersal:
bodies,
in their
fruit
vehicles
have
of
bringing 39 percent flowering plants to
endemic
islands, feat
for
responsible
Hawai‘i’s
20,000+ and counting new duced, along with numerous exotic
ducks
Once
—KLR
arrived
in the Hawaiian
Islands,
wing, their biggest challenge still awaited them: growth and self-regeneration. Many plants did adapt, evolving from somewhat small numbers of original immigrants, in isolated niches, and with very limited genetic In fact, it is thought that the 1,029 (1,175, material. 2012 update) known flowering plants endemic to Hawai‘i evolved from 270 original colonists W. et al. These new 1990). L., (Wagner, species coevolved in elegant equilibrium, losing chemical and mechanical defenses against grazing insects
by wind,
and
water,
animals
or
did
that
not
in the
exist
new
environ-
and
animals
and
they developed symbiotic relationships dependant on new species for food, pollination, and seed dispersal. Recent
lowland after
xvi
a
rat
Since
*
evidence
indicates
that
species stopped claiming
human
2001), the
fossil
contact,
fact often
and,
around
attributed
eventually,
the arrival
INTRODUCTION
(increasing Many of
animals. and
animals
are
so
endemic
Hawai’‘i’s
alike the
on
almost
is
native
on
an
plants
scale; its
enormous
has
been
devastating
incalculable.
of humans
400 AD to the
other
native
territory (Burney et al.
introduction
grazing
to the
the
new
of
animals.
islands, 15,000-—
Kauai—
Kokee,
KLR
Fortunately, landscapers, in Hawai’i public educators to
take
an
interest
cal
heritage. learning more amazing and cent occur
of
native
home
gardeners, and recently begun priceless biologi-
have
in Hawai’‘i’s
children
Hawai‘i’s
about
and
adults
these
plants unlikely journey. Almost Hawaiian plants and
nowhere
isolation
else
has
in the
world, that
and
and
are
their
95 peranimals Hawai‘i’s
long today it has the highest percentage of endemics (90 percent endemic in the world flowering plants) per square should
mile
justify
of
meant
landmass.
even
These for
facts these
alone
unique Archipelago. By writing this book and sharing over a decade of experience growing native Hawaiian plants, I hope to simplify the subject and make it enjoyable. My reward will be to see these beautiful plants, well to Hawai‘i’s weather and soil, thriving in adapted the state. gardens, towns, and schoolyards across What could be a better plant for our landscaping of thouprojects than one that has spent hundreds sands of years evolving in Hawai‘i? treasures
Instead
ment.
per year) plants, insects,
intro-
birds.
(wing dispersed)
the seeds
been
species are losbecoming endangered or even fail to produce seedlings and die out. Plants and seeds are being eaten by insects, rats, goats, and deer; pigs destroy seedlings while digging for food. Habitat destruction by humans
Goats Koloa
have
insects
and
aggressive that ing the battle, extinct as they
impact
the
plants
a
great respect
of the Hawaiian
PART ONE:
THE BASICS NATIVE
OF
HAWAIIAN
PLANT PROPAGATION
Native
seeds
collected
at
NTBG—
DR
SEED PREPARATION Of the world
than
more
et al.
diverse
outer
of seed
of the
fruit, is the mature
up of the
seed
for the
coat
ally becomes
the
lize
successful
cases
to
also
have
seed
from
ing
seasonal
changes
in fruit and
germination.
digestive seed
Below
of fruits are
included
and
the
disperse
in the
travel,
or
to cope
of
bird. This
and
treatments
guidelines
will encounter.
family and genera
Fruits
within
the
with varyof
dispersed
drought. by pass-
extensive
requires different
general you
a
some
1980).
periods
and
to uti-
in
or
methods
and
eventu-
forms
embryo
storage,
seeds
diverse
the
tract
inner
—the
endosperm
protect
structures
are
and
to
scarified
of the
ovule, and is made
take
rainfall
outer
or
embryo, which
the
and
equally
consists
(Carlquist
effectively
the
and
more
an
parent
in
are
and
the
digestion,
collecting, cleaning,
ods
to
mechanisms
ing through
to
There
pericarp,
mature
Fruits
Hawai'i
to
layer (mesocarp),
—and
strategies
even
The ovary
is the
seedling.
animal
fruits
(testa), enclosing
stay close
are
kinds
seed
seedling
new
update).
forms.
middle
The
layer (endocarp).
Some
2012
native
are
of native
types
layer (epicarp),
food
1,029
2000),
assortment
covering
in the
flowering plant species
1999) (1,175,
thirty different
than
sity
al.
et
(Prance
(Wagner
310,000
diver-
methods for successful
for
the
Specific
profiles.
various meth-
of
by the hybrid stay true to the hybrid and do not revert back to either of the original parent species. To ensure a
produced
of
strain
pure them
from
the
controlled, use
from
or
a
pollinated plant,
clone
a
collect
seeds, wild
or
20: Clonal
(see page
Propagation). FLESHY
PULPY
OR
Collect
fruits
FRUITS
when
they are as ripe as possible. Pulpy or fleshy fruits usually become soft when and ripe may change in color from
to white, black, red, yellow, or other col-
green
orange, ors, Abutilon
menziesii
x
A.
—
hybrid
eremitopetalum
Ripe
KLR
from ruit
the
collection
is
most
aspects
one
of
of
successful If
seed
germination. seeds are gathered when their are insufficiently embryos developed (immature), germination is greatly impaired. The seed is prone to be thin, light in weight, shriveled, poor in quality, and short-lived, producing a weak at all. seedling or none be gathIdeally, seeds should ered
from
healthy, vigorous plants that
not
are
stressed
by
drought other
or
unfa-
vorable
cli-
.
.
matic
condi-
tions
that
4
©
SEED
%,og om
—
8om) &
saseeds
(NTBG)
National Garden
I grew native from all of the
plants islands
in close
seeds.
I tried
these
crossbred
to
grow seeds
many to
plants,
and
lum. tics
of the
some
generation.
hybrids I have
between
cross
and The
Abutilon
plant
of both
a
Abutilon
has
parents,
fall
Use
plastic bags help keep pulp soft until for easy removal cleaning. If fleshy pulp is allowed to dry around
the
seed, it may
hard covering very inhibit germination,
found wood
to
be
true
seeds.
if
genera within beautimen-
eremitopetaseeds
remove
often
the
characteris-
and
species.
to
will
hands.
your
to
of
see
the
on
easier
are
viable or not, and they were sometimes they produced hybrid species. The Abutilon, and Bidens, Tetramalopium,
pondero- ziesti devel-
the
At
fruits
off into
dur-
proximity to each other. Often, these plants would cross-pollinate freely and would readily produce major
ful
shriveled,
and
Botanical
nursery,
Hawaiian
one
insufficiently oped—DR
PREPARATION
ing harvest. Tropical
Schiedea yyFA that produced
~~
Alphitonia
before
disease
are
FIRWAIAN
end
(K)
—
RANGE/FABITAT
along
Hawaiian
streams
V.oahuensis E wailenalenne =
Endemic
EANGEABTIAT
(L, M) ridges
and
slopes
end
(Mo, M, H)
-
OPER BOS
snes
V.
HAWANAN
end
NAME:
—_—
PS
HAWAIIAN _
_
end (O)wet forests end (K) wet forests_ _
Description small
perennial
herb
to shrub
Propagation seeds
and
cuttings
1: Sun
requirements species.
differ for each
Viola
maviensis
GENERAL
flowering
—
Maui—
JO
DESCRIPTION
Hawaiian
endemic
violets
30 inches
tall. Some
have
occur
low
as
small, perennial herbs
slender, woody shrubs up that root (rhizomes). It is believed to
to
trailing underground stems a single common colonizer from South America (Wagner The leaves tend to cluster at the branch 1990). alternate, heart-shaped ends, as do the purple to whitish fragrant flowers that rise above the foliage on long stems and are pollinated when they open. The dry capsules are thin and papery, containing many small, round, dark seeds. The seeds germinate fairly easily but the plants prefer to grow in cool, moist places with wet feet (boggy), whereas V. chamissoniana will tolerate and V. lanaiensis hot, dry locations if planted in well-draining soil. They can also be propagated by rhizome-stem cuttings. Keep these moist at all times until they are rooted. that
400
*
VIOLACEAE
all of these
are
derived
from
Entire
endemic
Hawaiian
Range:
Wild
Habitat:
Occur
slopes, along
in open
¢
bogs,
within
streams,
on
mesic
ridges
and
to wet
for-
e
Small
herbs
perennial
woody shrubs;
with
some
below
stem
to
Stem/Trunk: and
the
Stems
can
the
are
ter-
to
Leaves
higher germination
the
1
and sow
rhi-
mist
the
hours; onto
in
viable
tap
seeds
V.
lanaiensis;
the
seeds
of 3
is
parts
in.
remaining species
parts fine cinder
that
system
them
water
of the
them
keep
of 3
mix
a
(3:1) for V. chamis-
mix
part potting
mix
a
seeds
(3:1) and
moss
them
by soaking
three
to
sow
to
Surface
un-
less
to
shaped
with
toothed
stalks
shorter
so;
rounded,
leaf
or
equal
longer
or
be
may
than
clustered
Inflorescence/Flower:
the
than
leaf
the
toward
spaced openly along with
strongly heartmargins slight
alternate,
are
or
blade;
branch
in
1
to
part peat
intermittent
an
only during daylight
on
leaves
ends
are
and
have
e
¢
Fruit
which
is
a
dry capsule, along
thin
ish, with
are a
dark,
numerous,
leathery
seed
coat,
small,
round-
dull
(Wagner
and
al. 1990)
seeds
nate
in
to
feed
the
until
few
months,
four
Keep
them
direct
first
collect
the
thin
dry
in
them
paper
they
you
¢
pot,
them
Move
to
amended
mix
shaded
a
a
into
with
cinder.
protected from as they are
area
rain,
heavy to four
because
into
months
they
into
a
shal-
shallow-root-
are
an
with
area
shade
partial and
to
V. lanaiensis.
To
(rhizome)
e
separatdo
manually by breaking the cap-
Viola
sules
O‘ahu—
your violets by cuttings first collect the rhizome-
clonally propagate the
rhizomes,
Remove
them
treat
roots
some
any
lower
of direct
this
open.
in
develop transplant them
for V. chamissoniana
sun
stems; should be
in
can
leaves
plants.
like
dry bag until
are
then
in three
low, wider
from
open.
Keep
and
sunlight seedlings.
Repot ed
six true
to
and
delicate
¢
them
light their
pots.
¢
when
capsules mature they are and starting
germi-
seedlings monthly with to help strengthen
well-draining
a
CUTTINGS
by seed,
four
will
violets
your months.
CULTIVATION
SEEDS
propagate
and
area,
day.
from
solutions
Wait
full AND
one
Foliar
Use
¢
PROPAGATION
other
(slow-growing)
viable
¢
¢
Seeds
shaded
covered,
a
every
All
2-inch
papery, chamber or
cell
Seed:
in
growth. e
and
each
(dehisces)
opens
them
fertilizer
a
open Fruit:
the
water
GERMINATION
or
stipules perfect, axil-
five
flat
Keep
blade
thin
stems;
Flowers
five
leaf
¢
lary, sepals, petals, the lower blossom, bilaterally symmetrical wider than the other petal distinctly petals; of with various combinations of white-tinged lavender or white, purple, pale greenish, or when the flower is pale yellow; pollinated
ed;
for
hours.
Leaves:
a
seeds
one
soniana
onto
zomes
¢
fresh
sink.
Surface
perlite
woody,
have
plants
some
¢
¢
downward,
to
branched;
to
and
some
herbaceous
are
upright
grow
branched
To
for
will
branching
rhizomes
growing ground; restrial or epiphytic Mature Height: 1-8 dm height
¢
the
Pretreat water
Habit:
seeds
rates.
ests
et
the
Start
like
cutting;
and
sealed
keep them plastic bag.
sunlight cutting into a 1 to perlite part potting
mix
made
mix
(3:1)
cinder
(3:1) for violets
Insert
a
each
to 1
bog Keep
part peat
there
present.
foliage in
a
moss
out
of 3 parts 3
or
parts from
areas.
¢
oahuensis
SP
flowers
—
covered
them
moist
in mist
system
or
in
a
shaded,
area.
VIOLACEAE
*
401
moist
soil
and
the
drier
will
do better
in
with
partial shade, plant species to partial sun
mesic in full
soil
well-draining
with
cinder
8-8-8
NPK
when
and
they
well
taller
that
small
a
until
dry
are
then
water
they
be careful
plants have break easily.
can
of
amount
in, and
established;
the
amended
fertilizer. them
Water
e
with
are
because
brittle
stems
PESTS
and
Ants
e
(scales,
their
associated
mealybugs,
aphids) can infest sucking insects plant juices. Use cide the V. chamissoniana
subsp.
tracheliifolia
seeds
-
OUTPLANTING
¢
violets
will
402
*
VIOLACEAE
Viola; these
your
feed
will
on
the
systemic pesti-
a
them
according
Red
spider
undersides
be
ready to plant out in one or two when they are growing strong and years, a have outgrown 1-2-gallon pot. Choose a site according to their natural habibe planted tats. For example, bog plants should Your
ants
and
to
and the
bait
for
protocols
for ants.
Maui—F&KS
¢
¢
control
to
pests
thrips,
them, e
with
spray the
plants
first
Slugs
or
snails
may
fruit; if you
pick
them
off
to
leaves;
reduce
the
eat
discover
by
attack
mites
horticultural
water
young bait or
of
hand.
to
oil any leaves
them,
the
remove
weekly;
stress.
and
the
apply slug
(MISTLETOE
FAMILY)
GENUS:
SPECIES
STATUS
HAWAIIAN
Korthalsella
K.
R
end
HAWAIIAN
NAMES:
Hulumoa:
’
degeneri
cecessssessevaesevevetstesestvevees
.
K. latissima
kaumahana
—
vlatyomula
RANGE/HABITAT
(O)
diverse mesic forests end
(K, O, H)
wet
forests
ind
(0,
_
cescssenen
COMMON
NAME:
Hawaiian
7 mistletoe STATUS
SPECIES K.
complanata
ind
—
(HI
mesic
K. remyana
RANGE/HABITAT
HAWAIIAN
sescsee
wD
diverse mesic forests end
(HI
exc.
Ni, Ka)
dry forests to bogs
Ni, Ka)
exc.
to
L,
_
forests
wet
ee
ae
end _
(HI
K, Ni, Ka)
exc.
dry foreststo bogs
GH Endemic : :
or
Indigenous
ee
Description hemiparasitic subshrub
ay lea seeds
1:
Range differs species.
each
Korthalsella
complanata
on
a
Pittosporum
—
Kaua‘i—
KRW
GENERALDESCRIPTION that live partly dependent on the hemiparasitic subshrubs branches of host plants. They have specialized roots that penetrate into the tissues of another for nutrients. In the wild are found on native they growing generally woody plants plant such as Acacia, Metrosideros, Diospyros, Myrsine, Sapindus, and Nestegis. These small everare green subshrubs easily recognized by their curious growth habit. They have circular or smaller branches on flattened and stems, many joints with numerous top. The tiny inconleaves as do the small flower clusters spicuous pairs of scale-like grow from the internodes, and pear-shaped fruits. The tiny fruits contain one flat seed that is explosively ejected when Hawaiian
native
Korthalsella
are
VISCACEAE
*
403
for
it is mature.
Its
I have
plant. ing this
under
area
and
the
branch
pleasure
of
host
or
propagat-
that my experience indicates viable seeds and place them of
plant and keep moist, they will eventually germinate into the enchanting Hawaiian mistle-
securely the
had
but genus, collect mature
if you
is another
target
never
grow
the bark
host
a
toe.
Entire
K.
Range:
Austral,
and
Henderson
is
indigenous
and
the Hawaiian
platycaula ing
Korthalsella
main
Hawaiian
Wild
complanata is indigenous
Islands
Hawaiian
species
K.
Islands;
Tahiti, Marquesas, Islands; the remain-
to
endemic
are
the
to
to all of the
Islands
K.
Habitat:
diverse
PROPAGATION
¢
Mature
Leaves
Leaves:
with
opposite,
reduced
are
entire
Inflorescence/Flower:
Flower
¢
and
beneath
it; male
is minute,
within
intermixed the stem;
there
a
is
ers;
flowers
surrounded flower
in
occur
by
a
clusters of
patch
become
groups
the
is inferior
lobed, and the ovary
flower
extensive,
leaf
hairs, or
or
fruit
them
lack
VISCACEAE
a
seed
coat;
ina
fruits
they have piece
small
when
ejected of stem
it.
until
bag
paper
seeds
with
fresh
stem
or
into
the small, flat seeds
from under
them tree;
as
axils,
This
is
on
a
Place
Keep
many-
fruits
necessary. Put the fruits
¢
the
collect
or
dry
the
Start
¢
fleshy, shaped like a baseball a persistent corolla, and
is
it has
pear;
Seeds
*
Keep
flow-
they are capped at one end with a viscid-sticky tissue; they contain chlorophyll, and the endosperm is starchy (Wagner et al. 1990)
404
several
so
explosive Seed:
with
genus; seeds trees
The
bat
seeds,
collect
yet before
mature,
are
their
first
by seed,
propagate
live
flowered Fruit:
e
is three-
in female
dark
a
are
around
corolla
in the
e
or
has
flowers band
continuous
calyx,
no
green-
it is wind-
female
and
¢
stipules
no
CULTIVATION
they
be
can
started.
scales, simple,
ish-yellow, with no flower stalk; insect-pollinated, unisexual; each bract
stems,
green
small
margins
To
they
plant Height: 1-5 dm height Stem/Trunk: Strongly jointed branches cylindrical to flat
AND
SEEDS
subwith
host
woody
F&KS
—
mesic
Dry, mesic, forests, and bogs Habit: Brittle, partially parasitic evergreen shrub, green and photosynthetic, grows wet,
seeds
complanata
not
the is
securely lightly moisten to dislodge the a
guess
I cannot
wait
myself yard. on
in my
bowl, and
a
the fruits a
piece
the
area
by
remove
hand.
of bark with
of
water,
seeds.
moist.
area
just
pretreatments
no
of how to
Acacia
to
propagate
experiment koa
and
with
this these
Metrosideros
a
ZYGOPHYLLACEAE BUSH
(CREOSOTE
FAMILY) SPECIES
GENUS:
Tribulus HAWAIIAN
T. cistoides
STATUS
HAWAIIAN
—_—
ind
(KI, Le, HI)
dry
coastal
NAMES:
RANGE
habitats
Nohu;nohunohu NAMES:
COMMON
Caltrop;puncture
vine
Deh Indigenous
Description herb
Propagation seeds
~~
“e Tribulus
flowers
cistoides
GENERAL
—
DB
DESCRIPTION
is a low, sprawling, perennial herb with many branching stems 3 feet long. weedy in coastal habitats. The leaflets are hot, dry small, paired commonly opposite and 1-3 inches long, with shiny, microscopic hairs that prevent the leaf surface from drying out from harsh coastal winds. Nohu has charming yellow saucer-shaped flowers, 1 inch across, that are borne on singularly long stems above the foliage. These ripen into round spiny birds’ feathers. Each fruit has three to five separate chamfruits that easily stick to coastal bers that split when mature. Each contains one Tribulus seed. The name is tiny egg-shaped derived from the Latin word and here it refers to tribolos, meaning a three-pointed weapon,
The It
nohu
occurs
the barbed Entire
Range:
Hawai'i
Wild Habit:
fruits.
it
Nohu
occurs
Habitat: Prostrate
is on
Coastal to
indigenous all of the
and
to the
old world,
it is
Islands
except
Hawaiian
maritime
upright perennial
pantropical Gardner
in maritime
Pinnacles
habitats, and
in
Necker
habitats herb
ZYGOPHYLLACEAE
*
405
¢
the
Keep
flat
and
strong drying winds, is
from
protected
and
rains
heavy
water
them
seeds
will
when
it
dry.
GERMINATION ¢
e
of all viable
Germination weeks
to
three
for two
Wait
a ¢
T. cistoides
habitat
albatross
—
Is. —F&KS
Midway
*
Mature
Several
Height:
Stem/Trunk:
ered
Stems
fine
with
Leaves:
long diffusely branched,
opposite, pinnately 3-10 cm pound, long, leaflets five to ten pairs, to oblong elliptic, about 18 mm long by 8 mm are
surfaces
covered
are
with
Flowers
radi-
perfect, ally symmetrical, solitary, growing on flower stalks from the leaf axils, with five sepals, and the five petals are bright lemon yellow, ten five stigmas stamens, in Fruit 10 mm Fruit: is a schizocarp, about diameter, spiny with three to five chambers, comwhen splitting ripe into each one-seeded are
Seeds
seed
(Wagner
oblong, with a membrathe endosperm absent
small,
are
and
coat
et al.
1990)
PROPAGATION
CULTIVATION
AND
SEEDS ¢
To
propagate
fruit in ¢
when
it is
paper
bag
Carefully
break
a
hammer
To
pretreat,
to
two
¢
Surface
*
soak
cleaned.
open
the
with
fruits
getting pricked by
the
small
a
spines;
seeds. the seeds
in
tap
for
water
one
hours. the
sow
perlite
406
until
to avoid
¢
them
by seed, first collect the spiny dry and brownish; keep it dry
the small
remove
to
1
part
in.
ZYGOPHYLLACEAE
beach
of dolomite
lime
full
into
before mix
well-draining
rinsed
shade
partial
e
Your six
nohu
at
sand
(or add
to the mix). first, and then
sun.
larger pots
months,
plants when
in
two
to
three
seeds
onto
vermiculite
a
mix
of 3
(3:1), and
parts water
will
be
they
have
ready
to
plant
outgrown
a
out
in
6-inch
pot. ¢
Choose
a
¢
¢
site
with
it with
Water
your plants prolonged periods This
is
an
full
bright yellow spiny fruits that
and
sun
beach
sand
in, then
well-draining cinder.
or
water
only during
of
excellent
its
drought. beach ground
flowers. may
Do watch
injure
bare
cover
out
with
for the
feet.
PESTS e
Ants
and
their
associated and
partments nous
into
soil; amend
Inflorescence/Flower:
Seed:
them
form
to
OUTPLANTING com-
wide; both leaflet hairs; stipules
move
a
cov-
hairs
Leaves
Keep
them
two
months.
m
are
amount
in
Repot
into
some
them
leaves
true
them
with
small
four
to
transplanting amended
take
months.
pests (scales, mealyinfest your nohu;
aphids) bugs, thrips, will feed these sucking insects juices. Use a systemic pesticide to and bait for the ants according to for ants (p.40). can
on
the
control
the
plant them
protocols
APPENDICES, CITATIONS, AND
lao.
2
ABBREVIATIONS
USED
IN
PLANT
FAMILY
DESCRIPTIONS
(WAGNER
ET AL.
1999)
Range End
Endemic:
naturally occurring only in a specified area, such as a single island, or only in the Hawaiian else on earth Archipelago and nowhere native to Hawai‘i and other Indigenous: regions _—_ about thirty plant species brought by Polynesian voyagers to Hawai‘i Polynesian introduction: Native: or endemic Indigenous species Naturalized: a nonnative species that becomes successfully established
Ind Pol Native Nat
Status AS
Apparently
E
Ex,
secure
Endangered ex.
in the
Extinct
wild
R
Rare
T
Threatened
Vv
Vulnerable
Except
exc.
ISLANDS
AND
EM
East
FF
French
H
Island
GP
Gardner
HI
The and
ATOLLS
Maui
Kl
Ka‘ula
Ko
Ko’olau
Ku
Kure
L
Lana‘i
La
Laysan
Le
Lehua
Li
Lisianski
M
Maui
Islands
Rock O’ahu Mountains, Sand and (incl.
Atoll
Island Island Island
Island
Midway
MI
Island
Mo
Moloka‘i
Island
N
Nihoa
NWHI
Northwestern Necker
Ni
Ni‘ihau
Island
Island Island
Oahu
Island
PH
Pearl
and
Hermes
Waianae
APPENDIX
Islands
Hawaiian
O
West
Green
Island
Molokini
Ne
islands)
(Ni‘ihau,
Island
Mi
*
other
Island
Kaua‘i
408
and
Island
Hawai‘i)
Kaho‘olawe
_~
Big
Hawaiian
main
eight
K
WM
(incl. Tern
the
Pinnacles
Ka
Wa
Shoals
Frigate
of Hawai‘i;
Mountains,
Maui
I
Atoll O’ahu
Islands)
O’ahu,
Moloka‘i,
Lana‘i,
Maui,
Kaho’olawe,
APPENDIX 176°
II :
172°
Kure wridw Midway:
‘
—---—
Hawaiian Islands
|
f
—
|
Lisianski Itlaysan
.
164°
Northwestern.
hON
eee
168°
.
or
Ni‘ihau
mi
0
200 ;
mi
Reet /Gardner Pinnacles
Pio
gunagestas
eaten
| French? | Frigate
|
i
mre
penspctesnsios
Necker
Nihoa ‘
N
we
ey,
a)
ede
| Main Hawaiian Islands
2a
ps
Kaho’ olawe
_
|
——
0
50 mi
} wht
fering
mentee
160° Plate 1. Map
of the
renrocinere
in nett
erp
nang
Hawaiian
snmneebentings
{
tin
bnpelarnnntnaebe
158°
159° Archipelago
O’ahu, Moloka‘i, Lana‘i, Maui, Nihoa, Honolulu,
nneetnnrie
in
and
where Hawai‘i
senate
157° native
Hawaiian
(map courtesy
taxa
of Brad
occur,
including Ni‘ihau, Kaua’‘i,
Evans, Bishop Museum,
Hawai’).
APPENDIX
II
*
409
APPENDIX PESTS
AND
Common
DISEASES
Scientific
Name(s)
Agromyzidae fly
stem
Ant
Aphid Black
borer
twig
Chicken
miner
rose
beetle
fly Fungal leaf spots snow
erineum
sinicus
scale mite
miner
Leafroller
(family): Tephritidae, (order): Diptera gloeosporioides Capra hircus Pinnaspis strachani Aceria hibisci (Nalepa) (family): Agromyzidae, Liriomyza spp. (family): Torricidae: Archips spp.
Mealybug
Planococcus
Mouse
Mus
Painted
lady caterpillar
Pig Powdery
mildew
fungus
Root-knot Root
nematode
Rust Scale weevil
Silverleaf
Whitefly
Slug Snail
Spider mites Spittle bug Sugarcane borer Sweet
potato
Thrip Two-spotted leafhopper Whitefly
*
Pseudococcus
spp.
cardui
APPENDIX
scrofa Spaerotheca spp., Erysiphe spp. Rattus exulans, R. norvegicus, R. Phytophthora spp., Phthium spp., Meloidgyne incognita
III
spp.
Pseudococcus
Phragmidium spp. (subfamily): Coccoidea (family): Bruchidae Bemisia argentifolii Vaginulus plebeius, Arion Achatina fulica Tetranychus spp. Aphrophora alni Diatraea
weevil
Toad
410
Vanessa
Planococcus
mealybug
Seed
spp.
musculus
Sus
Rat Root
Burmeister
Colletotrichum
Goat
Hibiscus
domesticus
Adoretus
Fruit
Hibiscus
Name
Melanagromyza splendes (family): Dolichoderinae, Myrmicinae (superfamily): Aphidoidea Xylosandrus compactus Gallus
Chinese
Leaf
III
spp.
saccharalis
Cylas formicarius (Fabricius) Bufonidae Heliothrips haemorrhoidalis Sophonia rufofascia Trialeurodes vaporariorum
rattus
spp.
Rhizoctonia
spp.
IV
APPENDIX GUIDE
TO
JA
Jesse Adams
SB
Steve
Bergfeld
HB
Heidi
L. Bornhorst
DB
David
GDC
Gerald
CC
Dr.
Colleen
MC
Dr.
Melany Chapin
M.
S.
Boynton
D. Carr
Carroll
Clark, USFWS
Michelle
Clark
Paul
PC
Captain
SC
Dr. Sheila
JD
Jim Denny Sean Gleason,
SG
Clark
Robert
J KJ
Jim Jacobi
CHL
C. H. Lamoureux
KLR
Kerin
GKL
G. K.
DL
Dr.
David
KM
Ken
Marr
TJM JO
John
SP
Steve
DR
Dr. Diane
Johnson
Lilleeng-Rosenberger Linney H. Lorence
J. Motley Obata P. Perlman
Ragone George Rosenberger and
Kim
Starr, USGS
Forest
NT
Natalia
PT
Dr. Peter
UK
unknown
AW
Art
KRW
Ken
RY
Randy Yokoyama
IT want
Seas
PTA
M USGA-HI.
F&KS*
Hawai’i’s
Our
Hobdy
Kathleen
GR
*
Save
—
Conant
RH
T.
PHOTOGRAPHERS
IDENTIFYING
ABBREVIATIONS
to
Tangalin,
Whistler R. Wood
recognize
native
NIBG
Townsend
Forest
ecosystems
and and
Kim
their
for
their
valuable
generosity
with
the many
Starr
contribution
beautiful
to
the
of
conservation
images they
share
with
the
public.
APPENDIX
IV
*
411
CITATIONS Abbott, LA. La‘au Hawai‘: Traditional Hawaiian Athens, J.S. and Ward, J.V. “Environmental
of Plants, 163. Change and
Honolulu: Prehistoric
In Asian
Hawai'i.”
Athens,
Uses
J.S., Tuggle,
Honolulu: Perspectives, 32(2): 205-223. H.D., Ward, J.V. and Welch, D.J. “Avifaunal in Prehistoric
Hawai‘i.”
In
Bishop Museum Press, Polynesian Settlement of Hawai‘i
University Extinctions,
1992. in
1993.
Press,
Vegetation Change,
and
Archaeological Oceania, 37:57-78.
Polynesian Impacts Burney, D.A., James, H.F., Burney, L.P., Olson, S.L., Kikuchi, W., Wagner, W.L., Burney, M., McCloskey, for a Diverse Biota from D., Kikuchi, D., Grady, E.V., Gage, R., and Nishek, R. “Fossil Evidence In EcologicalMonographs, 71(4): 615-641. Kaua‘i and Its Transformation Since Human Arrival.” 2001. A Natural 2nd edition, 468. Lawai: Pacific Tropical Botanical Garden, 1980. Carquist, S. Hawai‘i, History, of the Hawaiian Char, W.P. “A Revision Species of Sesbania (Leguminosae).” In Master’s Thesis, 183. Honolulu: of 1983. Hawai‘i, University of Plants and Customs of the South Seas, 314. Ann Degener, O. Plants of Hawai‘i National Park, Illustrative Arbor:
Edwards
Grant,
1-17.
and
H.T.
Saddle Hawaiian
River:
and
Oxford
In Evolution
Microevolution.”
University Press, 1998. Plant Propagation Principles
D.E.
Kester,
Islands, edited
on
and
4th
Practices,
by
R. Grant,
Peter
726.
edition,
Upper
Inc., 1983.
Prentice-Hall, and
Native
Islands
on
York:
New
Hartmann,
Inc., 1945.
Brothers,
P.R. “Patterns
Vascular
Naturalized
Plants
Checklist
(December
2012
Imada,
464.
S.H.
Lamb, McDonald,
Hawaii
Sunderland: Native
Museum.
Sinauer Trees
and
Associates,
Shrubs
Mez, C. “Myrsinaceae.”
In
Inc., 1999.
of the Hawaiian
Ka Lei the Leis
M.A.
update)
Editor:
Clyde Biological Survey Bishop L. Wagner, Derral R. Herbst, 1.3 [12 April 2012], Warren Hawaiian Vascular Plant Updates: Version Tim Khan, Nancy Flynn Judd, W.S., Campbell, C.S., Kellogg, E.A., and Stevens, P.F. Plant Systematics: A Phylogenetic Approach, T.
Islands, 160. Santa
of Hawaii, 192. Kailua: Pflanzenr, IV, 236 (Heft 9):
Ku 1-437.
Pa‘a
Fe: Sunstone
Incorporated
& Press
Press, 1981. Pacifica, 1989.
1902.
Press, 1965. Neal, M.C. In Gardens of Hawaii, 2nd edition, 924. Honolulu: Bishop Museum information. and research NTBG, National Tropical Botanical Garden, collection The Taunton H. Common-Sense Pest Control, 715. Newtown: Olkowski, W., Daar S., and Olkowski 1991. Press, of the Hawaiian Islands: Evidence for of the Fossil Avifauna Olson, S.L. and James, H.F. “Prodromus Wholesale
In Science 217:633-635. 1982. Contact.” by Man Before Western Hawai‘i Names for Vascular Press, Plants, 64. Honolulu: University of Hawaiian 205. and the Northwestern Islands, of Refuge: Wildlife History of
Extinction
Porter, J.R. Hawaiian Rauzon, M_J. Isles
of Hawai'i
2001.
1972.
Honolulu:
Press, University with in Southern Islands Notes on the Custom J.RG. “Fish-poisoning in the Hawaiian Museum 1921. In Occasional 219-236. Honolulu: 7(10): Press, Papers, Bishop Polynesia.” Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., and Sohmer, S.H. Manual of the Flowering Plants of Hawai'i, 1-2, 1853. Honolulu: Press, 1990. Bishop Museum Vascular Plants at Risk.” Wagner, W.L., Bruegmann, M.M., Herbst, D.M., and Lau, J.Q.C. “Hawaiian In Occasional Press, 1999. Papers, No. 60, 58. Honolulu: Bishop Museum
Stokes,
412
¢
CITATIONS
INDEX
GENERAL
Short-lived
H-M Hand-hot
or
soaking),
tap
(seed
water
13-14
Hardwood
Cuttings, 21 Herbaceous Cuttings, 22 Irrigation (greenhouse), 33 Keeping records and labeling, 5
Location
32
pretreatment
(seeds),
15
Nutrition
(seedlings, cutting, outplanting ), 19, 24-25, 37
Abbreviations
Island, 408 scarification, 15
Acid Air
layering,
Asexual
Pest
(clonal)
Pest
propagation,
20-27
Containers
control
and
watering,
Greenhouse 32-33
storage),
(seeds), 5,
7
8
18-19, 23-24, 29
Transplanting
and
outplanting,
36-37
Transplanting
rooted
cuttings,
Tubers
and
rhizomes
cuttings,
Water
Water
regimes, 18, 23 soaking (seeds),
Weed
management,
13-14
41
of seeds,
12-15
cutting mix,
28-29
pulpy fruits, 4, (seeds),
16-19
27
management,
8
Rooting
seed
hormones
mix, 17
(powders),
23
Sanitation
19, 24-25, 37
Germination
Grafting,
I-W
22-23
Recommended
(seed
Fertilizers, or
28-29
spores, 8-9
23-24
propagation,
Fleshy
17-18
R-S
20-25
Desiccation
Fern
Sowing seeds, Starting (fern) Storing seeds,
Pteridophyte (fern) propagation, 28-29
D-G fruits
management,
38-41
Recommended
Dry
36
12-14
17, 23
Cuttings,
age), 8 Soaking times (seeds), 13-14 Softwood cuttings, 22 Soil preparation (outplanting),
24
Pretreatment
33
and
management,
405 Photographers’ names, Polyacrylamide gel, 37 Pregermination treatments,
Cleaning seeds manually, 7 Cleaning seeds, 6-7 Collecting seeds, 4-5 Collecting (fern) spores, 28 Container production and maintenance,
disease
and
33, 403
25-27
stor-
Temperature (seed storage), Transplanting and media,
N-P No
(seed
36
(outplanting), (greenhouse),
Materials
seeds
Scarification 6
(greenhouse), (seeds),
33
14-15
Seed
potting mixes, 16-17 Seedling care, 18 Semi-hardwood cuttings, Shade (greenhouse), 32-33
21-22
GENERAL
INDEX
°
413
FAMILY A-B
INDEX G-H
Agavaceae,
44-45 46-47
Aizoaceae,
48-49 50-51
Apiaceae, 52-55 Apocynaceae, 56-63 Aquifoliaceae, 64-65 Araliaceae,
66-73
Arecaceae, Asteraceae,
74-77
78-101
Begoniaceae, Boraginaceae,
102-103
Brassicaceae,
108-109
104-107
C-D
Goodeniaceae, Gunneraceae,
Campanulaceae, Capparaceae, 118-119 Caryophyllaceae, 120-123
I-L Iridaceae, 216-217 Joinvilleaceae, 218-219 Juncaceae, 220-221
140-143 144-145
146-147
Ebenaceae,
Liliaceae,
230-233
234-237
Loganiaceae,
238-239
154-166
Fabaceae, 167-195 196-197 Flacourtiaceae,
414
°
FAMILY
INDEX
306-307
Polygonaceae,
308-309
Portulacaceae, Primulaceae, Ranunculaceae,
310-311
Rhamnaceae,
314-319
Rosaceae,
312-313
320-327
S-T Santalaceae,
351-355
Smilacaceae,
368-369
370-376
Solanaceae, Theaceae, 377-378
Thymelaeaceae, Malvaceae,
Menispermaceae, Moraceae,
256-257
258-259
Myoporaceae, 260-261 Myrsinaceae, 262-265 Myrtaceae, 266-272 Nyctaginaceae, 273-276 Oleaceae, 277-278 279-281 Orchidaceae,
Pandanaceae,
379-381
240-255
152-153
Euphorbiaceae,
302-305
Sapindaceae, 356-361 Sapotaceae, 362-365 Scrophulariaceae, 366-367
222-229
Elaeocarpaceae, 148-149 Epacridaceae, 150-151 Ericaceae,
Poaceae,
Rubiaceae, 328-343 Rutaceae, 344-350
126-127
128-135 Convolvulaceae, 136-137 Cucurbitaceae, 138-139 Cuscutaceae,
Droseraceae,
208-209
124-125
Chenopodiaceae,
Cyperaceae,
205-207
Hydrangeaceae, 210-211 Hydrocharitaceae, 212-213 Hydrophyllaceae, 214-215
Lauraceae, 110-117
202-204
Gesneriaceae,
Lamiaceae,
Celastraceae,
200-201
Geraniaceae,
Amaranthaceae, Anacardiaceae,
198-199
Gentianaceae,
Pittosporaceae, 285-297 Plantaginaceae, 298-299 Plumbaginaceae, 300-301
282-285
Papaveraceae, 286-287 Phytolaccaceae, 288-289 Piperaceae, 290-294
U-Z Urticaceae,
Verbenaceae,
382-395 396-397
Violaceae,
398-402
Viscaceae,
403-404
Zygophyllaceae,
405-406
SIN aawa tN) D)BD,4 Cassytha, 230-231
A
Cenchrus, 302-305 Centaurium, (changed
Abutilon, 240-242 Acacia, 167-169 Acaena, 320-321
Achyranthes,
Schenkia), 198-199
Chamaesyce, (merged Euphorbia) 158-159 Charpentiera, 48-49
48-49
Adenostemma,
78-79
Agrostis, 302-305 Alectryon, 356-357 Alphitonia, 314-315 Alsinidendron, (merged
66-67
Cheirodendron,
Chenopodium, 126-127 Chrysopogon, 302-305 into
Schiedea), 120-123
Alyxia, 56-57
Cladium, 140-143
Claoxylon, 156-157 Clermontia, 114-117 Cocculus, 256-257 Colubrina, 316-317
Amaranthus, 48-49 Anoectochilus, 279-281 Antidesma, 154-155
Coprosma, 330-
Argemone, 286-287
Cordia, 104-105
Argyroxiphium, Astelia,
80-81
Cuscuta,
234-235
331
232-233
138-139
Cyanea, 114-117 Cyperus, 140-143 Cyrtandra, 202-204
B Bacopa, 366-367 Bidens, 84-85 Bobea, 328-329 Boehmeria, 382-383 Boerhavia, 273-274 Bonamia, 128-129
D Deschampsia,
Broussaisia,
302-305
Digitaria, Diospyros,
146-147
C
Dissochondrus, 302-305 Dodonaea, 358-359
Caesalpinia, (kavaiensis changed
Drosera,
to Mezoneuron
kavaiensis),
Dubautia,
144-145 86-87
179-181
Calamagrostis, 302-305 172-173
E
Canthium,
342-343
Elaeocarpus, 148-149
118-119
Carex, 140-143
Eleocharis, 140-143
Embelia,
Fimbristylis, 140-143 Flueggea, 162-163 Fragaria, 322-323 Freycinetia, 282-283
G 200-201
Geranium,
Gnaphalium (changed to Pseudognaphalium), 94-95 Gossypium, 243-244 Gouania,
318-319
Gunnera,
208-209
334-335
H Halophila, 212-213 Haplostachys, 222-223 Hedyotis, (changed to Kadua), 336-337
Heliotropium, 106-107 Hesperocnide, 384-385 Hesperomannia, 88-89 Heteropogon, 302-305 Hibiscadelphus, 245-247
Canavalia,
Capparis,
Festuca, 302-305
302-305
Dianella, 236-237 Dichanthelium, 302-305
210-211
F
Gynochthodes (syn: Morinda),
Delissea, 114-117
Brighamia, 110-113
into
Gahnia, 140-143 Gardenia, 332-333
Cressa, 130-131
Cryptocarya,
82-83
Artemisia,
to
Eragrostis, 302-305 Erythrina, 174-176 Eugenia, 266-267 Euphorbia, 158-161 Eurya, 377-378 Exocarpos, 351-352
Hibiscus,
248-251
Hillebrandia,
102-103
262-263
GENERA
INDEX
*
415
I Tlex, 64-65
Ipomoea, 132-133 Isachne, 302-305 Ischaemum, 302-305 Isodendrion, 398-399
J
Jacquemontia, 134-135
Joinvillea,
218-219
K Kadua, (syn: Hedyotis), 336-337 Kanaloa, 177-178
Keysseria (syn: Lagenifer), 90-91 Kokia, 252-253 Korthalsella, 403-404
Labordia, 238-239
Lachnagrostis, 302-305 Lagenifera, (changed to Keysseria),90-91 Lepidium, 108-109 Leptecophylla,(syn: Styphelia) 150-151
Polyscias), 68-69 Myoporum, 260-261 Myrsine, 264-265
Pisonia, 275-276
386-387
Sideroxylon), 364-365 Nestegis, 277-278 Nothocestrum, Nototrichium,
Luzula, 220-221
Lycium, 370-371 Lysimachia, 310-311
372-373 48-49
O Ochrosia, 58-59 Oreobolus, 140-143
140-143
Mariscus,
(merged Cyperus), 140-143
Melanthera,
Osteomeles, 324-325 into
92-93
Melicope, 344-346 Metrosideros, 268-270 Mezoneuron, (syn: Caesalpinia kavaiensis), 179-181
*
GENERA
INDEX
295-297
Planchonella,
(syn: Pouteria),
to
Plantago,
298-299
Platanthera,
279-281
Platydesma,
347-348
Plectranthus, 226-227 Pleomele, 44-45
Plumbago, 300-301 Poa, 302-305
M Machaerina,
Pittosporum, 360-361
338-339
Nesoluma, (changed
Lobelia, 114-117
Phyllanthus, 164-166 Phyllostegia, 224-225 Phytolacca, 288-289 Piper, 292-294 Pipturus, 390-391
Nama, 214-215
Neraudia,
to
Pilea, 388-389
N Nertera,
Lepturus, 302-305 Liparis, 279-281 Lipochaeta, 92-93
416
(changed to Gynochthodes), 334-335
Mucuna, 182-183 Munroidendron, (changed
L
Perrottetia, 124-125 Peucedanum, 52-53
Morinda,
Pp
Pandanus, 282-285 Panicum, 302-305
Paspalum, 302-305 Peperomia, 290-291
Polyscias (syn: Munroidendron, Reynoldsia & Tetraplasandra) 68-73
Portulaca,
308-309
Pouteria, (changed to Planchonella), 360-361 Pritchardia, 74-77
Pseudognaphalium (syn: Gnaphalium), 94-95 Psychotria, 340-341 Psydrax, 342-343
Pteralyxia, 60-61 Pycreus (merger
Senna, 184-185 with
Cyperus),
140-143
Sesbania,
186-187
Sesuvium,
46-47
136-137
Sicyos,
R
Sideroxylon (syn: Nesoluma),
312-313
Rauvolfia, 62-63 Remya, 96-97 Reynoldsia (changed Polyscias) 70-71 Rhus,
Silene, to
50-51
114-117
Rubus, 326-327 Rumex, 306-307
S Sanicula, 54-55 Santalum, 351-355
Sapindus,
362-363
205-207
Scaevola, Schenkia, (syn: Centaurium), 198-199
Schiedea, 120-121
Schoenoplectiella,140-143 Schoenoplectus, 140-143 140-143
Uncinia,
140-143
Urera, 394-395
364-365
Rhynchospora, 140-143 Rollandia, (merged into Cyanea),
Scleria,
U
Sida, 254-255
Ranunculus,
Tribulus, 405-406 Trisetum, 302-305
120-121
Sisyrinchium,
216-217
Smilax, 368-369 Solanum, 374-376
Sophora, 188-189 Spermolepis,54-55 Sporobolus, 302-305 Stenogyne, 228-229 Streblus,
V Vaccinium,
152-153
Vicia, 192-193
Vigna,
194-195
400-402
Viola, Vitex, 396-397
258-259
Strongylodon, 190-191 Styphelia, 150-151 Syzygium, 271-272
T Tetramolopium, 98-99 Tetraplasandra, (changed to Polyscias), 72-73 Torulinium, (merged into Cyperus), 140-143 Touchardia,
392-393
Trematolobelia,
114-117
W Wikstroemia, 379-381 Wilkesia, 100-101 Wollastonia, (merged into Melanthera), 94-95
xX
Xylosma, 196-197
Z Zanthoxylum, 349-350
GENERA
INDEX
°
417
HAWAIIAN PLANT
AND
NAMES ‘Ala‘ala
A-B
wai
INDEX nui, 226-227,
290-291
‘A/ali‘i, 358-359 ‘A’ali‘i mahu, 150-151 A’‘e, 196-197, 349-350, 362-363 ‘Ae’ae, 366-367, 370-371 ‘Ahakea, 328-329 ‘Ahaniu, 140-143
‘Aheahea, 126-127 ‘Ahinahina, 80-81,
82-83
140-143
‘Ahu‘awa, A‘ia‘i, 258-259 ‘Aiea, 64-65, 372-373 ‘Aka‘akai, 140-143 102-103 Aka‘aka‘awa, ‘Aka‘akai naku, 140-143
‘Akala, 326-327 ‘Akalakala, 326-327 ‘Akia, 374-376, 379-381
Alahe’e, 342-343 Alani, 344-346 Alani
kuahiwi,
vitex, 396-397
130-131 Alkaliweed, 248-251 Aloalo,
Bulrush,
Alula,
C-G
110-113
‘Anapanapa,316-317
Au, 336-337,
362-363
‘Aku, 114-117 ‘Akulikuli, 46-47 ‘Akulikuli ‘ae‘ae, 370-371
Bastard
‘Ala‘a, 360-361
Beach Beach
Dwarf
kanaloa, 312-313 uli, 292-294
‘Awapuhiakanaloa, ‘Aweoweo, 126-127 ‘Awikiwiki, 172-173 ‘Awiwi, 198-199 sandalwood,
140-143
216-217
140-143
Cranesbill, 200-201 94-95 Cudweed, Dock, 306-307 Dwarf iliau, 100-101
351-352
Aulu, 360-361, Aupaka, 398-399
194-195
Caltrop, 405-406 Caper bush, 118-119 Catchfly, 122-123 Clay’s hibiscus, 248-251 Crabgrass, 302-305
‘Anaunau, 108-109 Anini, 377-378 ‘Anunu, 136-137 ‘Ape, 208-209 ‘Ape‘ape, 208-209
Awa
356-357
pea,
Beach
Bentgrass, 302-305 Blueberry, 152-153 Blue-eyed-grass, Bluegrass, 302-305
344-346
Ale, 298-299 Alena, 273-274
‘Awa
‘Akodlea,382-383
Beach
Beak-rush,
“Awa, 292-294
Akiahala, 248-251 ‘Aki‘aki, 302-305 ‘Akiohala, 248-251 ‘Akoko, 158-159
‘Ala‘alahua,
COMMON
naupaka,
205-207
140-143
279-281
Ehu/‘awa, ‘Eke Silversword, ‘Ekoko, 158-159
Elama, 260-261
dropseed, 302-305 morning glory, 132-133
80-81
146-147
Eluehe, 324-325 ‘Ena‘ena, 94-95
Fagara, False
349-350
nettle, 382-383
Fescue,
302-305
Flowering maple, 240-242 Fringed orchid, 279-281 Golden beardgrass, 302-305 Gray nickers, 170-171 Great
bulrush, 140-143 80-81 Greensword,
H-I Ha’‘a, 154-155 Ha‘awa, 295-297 Haha, 114-117, 208-209 Hahala, 202-204 Haha
418
*
HAWAIIAN
AND
COMMON
PLANT
NAMES INDEX
lua,
114-117
Ha‘iwale, 202-204 Hala, 284-285
Hea’e, 349-350 Heau, 351-352 184-185 Heuhiuhi,
Hala
He’upueo,
Hairgrass,
pepe,
44-45
372-373
Halena, Hame,
302-305
Hilie’e, Hilo
154-155
grass, 302-305 Hinahina kahakai,
Hao, 62-63 Hau
hele,
Hau
hele
Hau Hau
248-251
Hinahina,
‘ula, 252-253 hele wai, 248-251 kuahiwi, 245-247
Hawaiian
302-305
298-299
80, 82, 106-107,
200-201
Hinahina
kt
kahakai,
106-107
Hoi
kuahiwi, 368-369 Holei, 58-59 Holio, 232-233 Hona, 394-395 222-223 Honohono,
Ka’e’e, 182-183
Hawaiian
dracaena,
Hawaiian
Hawaiian
ebony, 146-147 erythraea, 198-199 holly, 64-65
Hawaiian
mint, 226-227
Hopue,
Hawaiian
mistletoe, 403-404 132-133 moonflower, nettle, 384-385
90-91 Howaiaulu, Hu/‘ahu/‘ako, 306-307 Hue, 256-257 Huehue, 256-257 Hue ‘ie, 256-257 243-244 Huluhulu, Hulumoa, 351-352, 403-404 Hunakai, 131-132
Hawaiian
Hawaiian Hawaiian Hawaiian
noni,
Hawaiian
44-45
334-335
Hawaiian
pearls, 170-171 plantain, 298-299
Hawaiian
poppy,
Hawaiian
raspberry,
Hawaiian
sandalwood,
Hawaiian
seagrass,
Hawaiian
sumac,
Hawaiian
vetch,
286-287 326-327 353-355
212-213 50-51
192-193
Hupilo,
J-K
Jewel orchid, 278-281 Kadua, 336-337
295-297
HO‘awa,
243-244
cotton,
214-215
‘Tliahi, 353-355 ‘Tliahialo’e, 353-355 Iliau, 100-101 ‘Tlie’e, 300-301 ‘Nlihia, 202-204 ‘lima, 254-255 ‘Inalua, 256-257
Ka‘e’e’e,
182-183
Ka‘i‘iwi,
190-191
Kakua
394-395
330-331
o
Kakalaioa, 170-171 Kala, 286-287, 326-327 Kalamona, 184-185 148-149
Kalia,
Kalili, 400-402
Kaluha, 140-143 238-239 Kamakahala, 78-79
Kamanamana,
Kanaloa, 177-178 210-211 Kanawao,
‘Te, 282-283
Kanawao
‘Te‘ie, 282-283
Kapana,
‘Thi,
134-135
hi‘iaka,
ke ‘oke
‘o, 202-204
224-225
Kauhi, 379-381
308-309
HAWAIIAN
AND
COMMON
PLANT
NAMES
INDEX
*
419
Kauila, 314-315, 316-317 Kaulu, 60-61, 360-361, 362-363 Kaumahana, 351-352, 403-404 Kauno’‘a, 138-139, 230-231 Kauna’‘oa, 138-139 Kauna‘oa kahakai, 138-139 Kauna‘oa lei, 138-139 Kauna’‘oa mAalolo, 230-231 Kauna‘oa Kauna‘oa
pehu, uka,
230-231
230-231
Kauokahiki, 271-272 Ka‘u Silversword, 80-81 120-121 Kuawawaenohu, Kauwila, 314-315, 316-317 Kava, 292-294 Kawa‘u,
64-65, 179-181
Kea, 179-181
Keahi, 364-365
Kili‘o’‘opu, 140-143 Kilioe, 262-263 Kio’ele, 336-337 Kiolohia, 140-143
Kiponapona, 224-225 Kiptikai, 106-107 Koa, 167-169 Koai‘a,
167-169
Koai‘e, 167-169 Koali ‘awa, 132-133 Koa‘oha, 167-169 Ko‘oloa ‘ula, 240-242 Kohekohe, 140-143
Koholapehu,
86-87
Koki’o, 248-251, 252-253 kea, 248-251 Koki’o ke’oke’o, 248-251 Koki’o ‘ula, 248-251 Koki’o ‘ula‘ula, 248-251 Koko, 158-159 Kokomélei, 158-159 Kolea, 264-265 Kolea lau nui, 264—265 Koli‘i, 114-117 Kolokolo kahakai, 396-397 Kolokolo kuahiwi, 310-311 Kolomona, 184-185
Koki’o
Ko’oko‘olau, 84-85 Ko’olau, 84-85
Kopiko,
420
*
340-341
HAWAIIAN ANDCOMMON
Kou, 104-105
136-137
162-163 Mehamehame, 144-145 Mikinalo, Mohihi, 228-229 Mohihihi, 194-195 Mokihana, 344-346 Mokou, 52-53
86-87
Mountain
118-119
Kuawawaenohu,
Kukaepua‘a,
302-305
Kulu‘, 48-49 Kutmakani, 358-359
Kipala, Kupaoa,
146-147
66-67
Lapalapa, Laukahi
kuahiwi,
Laukea,
156-157
298-299
Lehua, 268-270 Liliwai, 320-321, Liua, 114-117
400-402
Lonomea, 362-363 Loulu, 74-77 Ma‘aloa, Mahoe, 356-357
Maiele, Maile, 56-57 Makaloa, 140-143 Makole, 338-339 Makoloa, 140-143 Makou, 312-313 Maku, 248-251 Mamake, 390-391 Mamaki, 390-391 Mamane, 188-189 Mamani, 188-189 362-363
hele, 248-251
202-204
196-197
Mau‘u Mau’u
pu’uka’a,
ho‘ula
Mehame,
PLANT
154-155
NAMES INDEX
92-93
Nuku
‘i‘iwi, 190-191
Nutgrass,
‘aki‘aki, 140-143 ‘ili, 216-217 1a‘ili, 216-217
Mau‘u
286-287
405-406 Nohunohu, Noni kuahiwi, 334-335 Nuku, 190-191
Ma’ohi‘ohi, 228-229 Ma’‘oloa, 386-387
Mau’‘u
Naule,
Neki, 140-143 Neleau, 50-51 Neneleau, 50-51 Nioi, 266-267 200-201 Nohoanu, Nohu, 405-406
Ma’o, 243-244
Maua,
332-333
Nehe,
Manele, 349-350, Manene, 298-299 Manono, 336-337
Mapele,
Nana,
Naupaka kai, 205-207 Naupaka kuahiwi, 205-207
118-119
150-151
hau
Wai’‘ale’ale, 320-321, 400—
402
386-387
Ma’o
Na‘t, 332-333 Na’‘ena’e, 86-87 Naeo, 260-261 Naieo, 260-261 Naio, 260-261 Naku, 140-143 Nanaku, 140-143 Nanea, 194-195 Nani
302-305
Lovegrass,
Maiapilo,
302-305
N-O
L-M Lama,
pili,
140-143
140-143
Pamakani
mahu,
Panic
R-S
302-305
grass,
136-137
Panunukuahiwi,
Papala, 48-49, Papala képau, Pawale,
164-166
114-117
Panaunau,
302-305
Rice
302-305
grass,
275-276
Sandbur,
275-276
Saw
134-135
Sea
302-305
grass, 140-143 Sea bean, 182-183
306-307
Pa‘t-o-hi‘iaka,
Reedgrass,
purslane, 46-47 heliotrope,
Peppergrass, Pepperwort,
108-109
Seaside
108-109
O’a, 314-315
Persimmon,
146-147
80-81 Silversword, 54-55 Snakeroot,
‘Oha,
Pili
114-117
‘Oha wai, 114-117 ‘Ohai, 186-187
‘Ohe’e, 342-343
Pilo
‘Ohe
Pipiwai,
‘Ohe
302-305
grass,
Pili
uka, Pilo, 118-119, 330-331,
kiko‘ola, 72-73 70-71 kukuluae’o,
lau li‘i, 347-348
Spikerush, 140-143 Spurflower, 226-227 Strawberry, 322-323
140-143
Sundew,
Pohinahina, Pokalakala,
‘Ohe
Pokeberry,
205-207
‘Ohe, 70-72, 218-219,
‘Ohe’ohe,
‘Ohelo,
302-305
70, 72
152-153
‘Ohelo kai, 370-371 ‘Ohelo kau la‘au, 152-153 ‘Ohelo papa, 322-323 70-71
‘Oheokai,
‘Ohi‘a, 268-267 ‘Ohi‘a ha, 271-272 ‘Ohi‘a lehua, 268-270
‘Olapa,66-67 ‘Oliko, 264-265 ‘Oloa, 386-387 Olomea, 124-125 Olona, 394-395
‘Olopa, 400-402 Olopua, 277-278 ‘Olulu, 110-113
‘Opelu, ‘Opiko,340-341 Opuhe, 394-395
114-117
P Pa‘ihi,
271-272
Pa‘iniu,
Pamakani,
234-235
98-99, 164-166,
248-251, 400-402
336-337
144-145
Po’e, 308-309
makai, 70, 72 ‘Ohe mauka, 72-73
‘Ohe
naupaka,
Sorrel, 306-307
302-305
kea
106-107
106-107,
396-397
T
68-69, 286-287
Thorny popolo,
288-289
288-289 Pokeweed, Pohuehue, 132-133 Polinalina, 396-397 Pololo, 138-139, 230-231, 288-289, 374-376 Po’ola, 156-157
U-W UhauhakG, 306-307 Uhi, 368-369 Uhiuhi, 179-181, 184-185 ‘Uki, 140-143, 236-237 Uki‘uki, 236-237 Ulehihi, 368-369
Po‘opo’ohina, 106-107 Popolo-‘aiakeakua, 374-376 Popolo ki mai, 288-289, 374-376
Ulei,
Pua, 277-278
maka
Pua
o
Pua
pilo,
Pa‘awa,
Umbrella
140-143
sedge,
U'ulei,
324-325
Wahine
noho
kula, 398-399 124-125, 390-391
Waimea, Walahe’e, 342-343 Wanini, 377-378
136-137
118-119
Water
292-294
hyssop,
366-367
Wiliwili, 174-176 Woodrush, 220-221 82-83 Wormwood,
Pu’e, 114-117
Puhala, 284-285 132-133 Puhuehue, Pu ‘uka ‘a, 140-143 Puheu, 94-95 Puhilihili, 194-195 Pukiawe, 150-151 Puncture vine, 405-406
HAWAIIAN
277-278
Ulupua,
nui, 102-103
kama,
324-325
Ulihi, 224-225 202-204 Ulunahele,
Pua‘ainaka, 228-229 Pua ‘ala, 110-113 Pua‘a olomea, 124-125 210-211 Pu‘ahanui, Pua kala, 114-117, 286-287 172-173 Puakauhi, Pua
374-376
AND
COMMON
PLANT
NAMES
INDEX
¢
421
ABOUT Kerin
THE
AUTHOR
Lilleeng-Rosenberger immediately recogthe special nature of Hawai‘i when she
nized arrived
Hilo
in
fascination
Her
1968.
in
with
Hawaiian
with
plants, sparked by working when she (Cordyline) cuttings, increased teered at the National Botanical Tropical (NTBG)
Kaua‘i.
on
ticultural
There,
Garden
of the finest
some
her
ti
volun-
hor-
air
taught grafting, layerand specialpropagating methods ized horticultural techniques. Her natural green thumb and keen interest quickly earned her the position of being in charge of propagation for the NTBG volunteer plant site. In 1988 Kerin volunteered for a community experts
and
ing,
other
outreach
to
of
the
from
grant
MacArthur to
a
to
native
propagate of
result
this
Conservation
Hawaiian
the
grant, (HPCC),
Center
well
propagate
the
unlock
to
opportunity Hawaiian
for
800
over
plants.
She
how
break
tried
mimic
2005—GR
nursery
to
grow”
cal
to
NTBG
Plant Kerin
the
needed of
to
native
nature
to
tional
articles
held
with
worked
community the subject
been T.
has
Kerin
reputa-
Hawai‘i
species to
a
understanding plants. The
gave methods
in her
Hawaiian
Catherine
awarded
was
center
resource
and
D.
John
Foundation
create
how
the
Kerin
increase
to
awareness
unknown A
NTBG
at
by providing native community. She earned being capable of growing “hard plants.
public plants tion
created
program
of several her
for
is still
siasm
for
with
others
book
so
and
ate
efforts, has and
internaand
and
the
the
to
and
everyone
enjoy growing
com-
general public. Today
be the
world
leader
plant propagation. her knowledge of native led to the publication
has
has
scientific
Her
sharing that
botani-
unique knowledge,
considered
Hawaiian
native
national
volunteers,
munity, specialists, she
research
various
on
on
classes
the worldwide
in
enthu-
plants of
this
anyone apprecikeiki o ka ‘aina (chilcan
the
,
dormancy, initiate germination, successfully grow healthy seedlings and plants. Her work with the HPCC provided in this much of the knowledge included figure
out
to
dren
of the land).
and
Article:
book. Kerin
then
tural
took
a
with
position the
as
Research
research
horticul-
specialist Corporation of the University of Hawai‘i (RCUH). Her work involved the cycle of collecting seeds, propagating them, and then planting them back out into their wild habitats. By experimenting with the at different Kerin increased elevations, plants her knowledge of what was possible when with of various altitudes and working plants vegetation regions. 422
AWARDS:
*
ABOUT
THE
AUTHOR
United Airlines 1997, September HEMISPHERES magazine Flower Power: Kerin Lilleeng-Rosenberger by Margaret A. Haapoja. March
In
11, 1998
History Month, recognized me to
Horticulture
2006
Awards
The for and
book
my
for
the Hawai'i
in
Garden
Club
of
Women’s
of Honolulu
my outstanding contribution in Hawai‘i. Conservation
won
Excellence Book
observance
the in
Publishers
Ka
Palapala
Natural
Po’okela
Science
Association.
from
public
s
has
awareness
of
grown threatened
and
Hawai‘i’s
unique _ heritage—89% of the Islands’ native else in plants are found nowhere in helping these species to the world—interest thrive by planting them in backyards and But native landscaping projects has blossomed. are from exotics. different plants They propabotanical
gate,
bloom,
and
climate
natural
Hawai‘i’s
fruit
in
accordance and
knowledge of how to grow and special plants has been hard to come by, passed on mostly by word of mouth, one plant at a time. Growing Hawai‘i’s Native Plants is the consolidated resource that provides all the inforneeded to identify and propagate native mation of the Hawaiian Much plants. knowledge found than a decade here, gathered from more schedules. care
for
The
these
of research,
can
be found
nowhere
else.
ABOUT
THE
Lilleeng-Rosenberger immediately the nature of Hawai‘i recognized special when she arrived in Hilo in 1968. Lilleengwith Hawaiian Rosenberger became fascinated plants. Her knowledge of native plants grew as at the National she worked Tropical Botanical
K:=: Garden Center cultural
of the
with
the Research
of Hawai‘i
1,386
entry there
mation
importantly, Growing Hawaii's work
Tropical gardeners the
will
world
also
and
Native
color
botanist
and
the
Royal director
of the
one-stop
a
owners,
nursery
alike.
small
500
foreword
Prance, Eden
valuable
a
literature
on
conservation.
than
a
around
volume
this
Gardens
Botanic
is
conservationists
find
Sir Ghillean
tific
outplanting.
Plants
backyard gardeners and
more
and
images
and
control,
for
comparatively tropical plant propagation and are
the For
disease
to the
Included
of
species. species description, inforgrowing methods, ger-
directions
and
each
Hawaiian
for scientists
conservationists
addition
a
provenance, rates, pest
mination
high-quality by renowned
former at
Kew
director and
of
scien-
Project.
AUTHOR Lilleeng-Rosenberger has worked with thé. the globe on community from across
botanical various
ject cles
on
classes
efforts.
research
of several
tific
Corporation
(RCUH).
$46. 00 9
is
for
Growing extensive,
an
entry
native
existing
on
contains
researched
each
most
Plants
her
and
national
She
and
has
unique knowledge, courses
for
been
the
international
and
volunteers,
subarti-
has the
held scien-
community, specialists and the general to be a world public. Today she is considered leader in native Hawaiian plant propagation.
(NTBG), the Hawaii Plant Conservation (HPCC), and held the position of horti-
specialist University
clear, easy-to-read format,
true
reference
own
a
Native
thoroughly
with their
on
Using Hawai‘i’s
781939
487711