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What

ʻŌhelo Kau Lāʻau (Vaccinium calycinum)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

The flowers are tubular, cylindrical to urn-shaped, triangular-lobed, and up to almost 1/2 inch (12 mm) long. The flowers are followed by round, bright red, up to 2/3 inch (15 mm) in diameter berries with numerous small seeds. The leaves are green, hairless, alternate, saw-toothed, 2 to 3 inches (5 to 8 cm) long, and egg-shaped to obovate (narrower near the base and wider near the tip). The shrubs are clumping and have multiple, erect branches.

Ohelo Kau La'au grows in wet native rainforests and in bogs.

Two other, very similar Vaccinium species are found here in Hawaii, but Ohelo 'Ai (Vaccinium reticulatum) is a smaller plant and has more flavorful berries and smaller leaves, while Ohelo (Vaccinium dentatum) is also a smaller plant and has more sharply toothed, elliptic leaves.

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What

Fiery Skipper (Hylephila phyleus)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

Hylephila phyleus is a year-round resident in the far southern United States ranging south to Argentina and throughout the Antilles, and introduced to Hawaii in 1970. This species is migratory northward to Ontario and Prince Edward Island in the east, and to Oregon in the west (Scott 1986). Habitats are southern urban lawns and grassy places. Host plants are grasses of several species. Eggs are laid on and around the host plant singly. There are multiple flights all year in southern Florida and southern Texas (Scott 1986).

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What

Hawaiian Happy Face Spider (Theridion grallator)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

The happy face spider, nananana makaki’i (in Hawaiian), is one of
the 132+ native spider species in Hawai’i. Most of the spiders got to
Hawai’i by ballooning, a method of dispersal when a spider is carried
by wind on a strand of web. Ever since the ancestor spiders arrived
the Hawaiian Islands, they established territories and many species have adapted to their specific environment. For example, some researchers believe that the patterns on the happy face spider were developed to avoid predators. The patterns of happy face spiders may resemble the rust spots on the underside of a leaf, where they mainly live. Found only on
islands of Oahu, Molokai, Maui and Hawai’i, the happy face spider is very small and elusive.
They are about half an inch big, including the length of their legs. During the day they hide in
the vegetation and only come out to hunt insects at night. Happy face spiders are also known to
guard their eggs and care for their young. Since their discovery in the early 1900’s, little study has been done on them until the 1970’s. Still, researchers and natural resources managers have very limited knowledge on the happy face spider, mainly due to their nocturnal (active at night) behaviors.

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What

Kilauea Lava Cricket (Caconemobius fori)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Place

holei (Google, OSM)

Description

Lava crickets live on fresh lava flows. They have adapted from life among wet rocks at the beach (the beach cricket is their cousin) to the hot rocks of fresh lava flows. They drink only fresh water. Lava crickets start colonizing smooth pahoehoe lava flows within a month after as eruption! They abandon an area within 20-100 years, when the barren lava flow becomes covered with plants. They spend their days in the cracks of lava flows and gather their food at night. The strong winds that blow over the lava bring them insects and other small creatures to eat. This food and water gets trapped in holes in lava rocks. A tasty meal to a lava cricket is one that has been cooked by the heat of a warm lava flow! Unlike many other types of crickets, lava crickets are wingless and they do not crick.

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What

'Ohelo 'Ai (Vaccinium reticulatum)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Place

halemaumau (Google, OSM)

Description

The 'Ōhelo that grows at higher altitudes and is abundant in the Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park and Volcano area. The plant is usually small, from 6 inches to waist high, though it can occasionally be larger. The plant has many branches with small rounded leaves. Young leaves at the tops are reddish with green mature leaves.

Related to the cranberry plant, the berries of the 'Ōhelo are edible and quite delicious. They range in color from bright red to yellows and oranges and the color is not necessairly indicative of the ripeness. The berries can be slightly tart to very sweet, depending on the plant and the maturity of the berries. While 'Ōhelo grows berries throughout the year and plants with berries may be next to ones that just had berries - there are definite seasons where more berries are produced.

The 'Ōhelo berry was considered sacred to the Volcano Goddess Pele and offerings of branches with fruit were made into the Kīlauea volcano. Today the berry is a favorite staple of the Hawaiian Nēnē Goose as well as people.

Important Note: Because the 'Ōhelo berry is eaten by the protected Nēnē Goose do not pick any berries you find in the park.

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What

Beach Naupaka (Scaevola taccada)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

The pulpy fruits tolerate salt water and float on the ocean currents for dispersal to other islands, unlike the dark purple fruits of the other native naupaka species which are eaten and dispersed by birds. However, the seeds of naupaka kahakai will only germinate with fresh water.

In ancient times, one version goes, there was a beautiful Hawaiian princess known as Naupaka. One day, the villagers noticed that Naupaka looked very sad. They told her parents, who approached Naupaka and asked her what was troubling her.

“I have fallen in love with a man named Kaui,” replied the princess. “But Kaui is not of noble birth—he is a commoner.” According to Hawaiian tradition, it was strictly forbidden for members of royalty to marry people from the common ranks.

Distressed, Naupaka and Kaui traveled long and far, seeking a solution to their dilemma. They climbed up a mountain to see a kahuna who was staying at a heiau (temple). Alas, he had no clear answer for the young lovers. “There is nothing I can do,” he told them, “but you should pray. Pray at this heiau.”

So they did. And as they prayed, rain began to fall. Their hearts torn by sorrow, Naupaka and Kaui embraced for a final time. Then Naupaka took a flower from her ear and tore it in half, giving one half to Kaui. “The gods won’t allow us to be together,” she said. “You go live down by the water, while I will stay up here in the mountains.”

As the two lovers separated, the naupaka plants that grew nearby saw how sad they were. The very next day, they began to bloom in only half flowers.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

The wolf spider is an ambush predator, hiding under large rocks until an active prey comes within range (Howarth and Stone 1982; Howarth et al. 1999). It likely preys on any actively moving arthropod including the wēkiu bug (Englund et al. 2002). At higher elevations on the mountain wolf spiders probably subsist almost completely on Aeolian insects which are carried to the higher reaches of the mountain by wind currents. The female wolf spider builds nests of silk and earth under rocks, and remains with the nest to protect the developing eggs (Howarth and Stone 1982). The wolf spider is found in low densities across the summit in a wider variety of areas than the wēkiu bug (Howarth et al. 1999).

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What

Pūkiawe (Leptecophylla tameiameiae)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 6, 2016

Description

The Pūkiawe plant grows at higher altitudes and is abundant in the Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park and Volcano area. The plant is fairly small, only a foot or two high. It has thin branches with many narrow and tiny leaves; the flowers are small and white. Its berries are very tiny, about 1/4 inch around and may be red, white or reddish-white in color. The Pūkiawe prefers dry and/or alpine habitat and is one of the last plants found at high altitude.

While the berries of the Pūkiawe plant are not edible, they are used in the making of leis and a dye is also produced from the boiled and mashed berries for coloring tapa cloth. In ancient times the leaves were used for headaches and colds.

When ‘ali‘i wished to mingle with commoners (with no harm to them or himself), would be smudged with smoke from pūkiawe while kahuna chanted for "dispensation" (Degener 1930:247)

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What

Pele

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 6, 2016

Description

Described as "She-Who-Shapes-The-Sacred-Land" in ancient Hawaiian chants, the volcano goddess, Pele, was passionate, volatile, and capricious. In modern times, Pele has become the most visible of all the old gods and goddesses. Dwelling in the craters of the Big Island's Kilauea Volcano, she has been sending ribbons of fiery lava down the mountainside and adding new land around the southeastern shore almost continuously since 1983.

Lava entering the sea.
Pele was born of the female spirit Haumea, or Hina, who, like all other important Hawai'i gods and goddesses, descended from the supreme beings, Papa, or Earth Mother, and Wakea, Sky Father. Pele was among the first voyagers to sail to Hawai'i, pursued, legends say, by her angry older sister, Na-maka-o-kaha'i because Pele had seduced her husband. Pele landed first on Kaua'i, but every time she thrust her o'o (digging stick) into the earth to dig a pit for her home, Na-maka-o-kaha'i, goddess of water and the sea, would flood the pits. Pele moved down the chain of islands in order of their geological formation, eventually landing on the Big Island's Mauna Loa, which is considered the tallest mountain on earth when measured from its base at the bottom of the ocean.

Steam rising as lava enters the sea.
Even Na-maka-o-kaha'i could not send the ocean's waves high enough on Mauna Loa to drown Pele's fires, so Pele established her home on its slopes. Here, she welcomed her brothers. A cliff on nearby Kilauea Mountain is sacred to her eldest brother, Ka-moho-ali'i, king of the sharks and the keeper of the gourd that held the water of life, which gave him the power to revive the dead. Out of respect for this brother, to this day, Pele never allows clouds of volcanic steam to touch his cliff.

Her other brothers also still appear on the Big Island mountain; Kane-hekili as thunder, Ka-poho-i-kahi-ola as explosions, Ke-ua-a-kepo in showers of fire, and Ke-o-ahi-kama-kaua in spears of lava that escape from fissures during eruptions.

Of all her siblings, Pele favored her youngest sister Hi'iaka, the most. Pele, Hi'iaka and another sister, Laka, goddess of hula, were all patronesses of the dance, but Hi'iaka was said to have hatched from an egg that Pele kept warm during the long canoe ride to Hawai'i by transporting it in her armpit.

After Hi'iaka grew to womanhood on the Big Island, Pele traveled in spirit form to the north shore of Kaua'i to witness a dance performance at a pahula, or dance platform, that still exists near Ke'e Beach. Here she manifested herself as a desirable young woman, and quickly fell in love with a handsome young chief named Lohi'au. She dallied with Lohi'au for several days, but eventually her spirit had to return to her sleeping body on the Big Island. Upon awakening, Pele sent Hi'iaka to convince Lohi'au to come to her. The sisters extracted vows from each other: Hi'iaka promised not to encourage Lohi'au should he become attracted to her and in return, Pele promised to contain her fires and lava flows so as not to burn a grove of flowering ohi'a trees where Hi'iaka danced with her friend Hopoe.

On Kaua'i, Hi'iaka found that Lohi'au had died of grief after Pele disappeared, but the graceful younger sister was able to restore his spirit to his body, bringing him back to life. Together, the two of them began the journey to the Big Island, but Pele's suspicious nature got the best of her. Because forty days had passed since Hi'iaka had set out on her assigned mission, Pele decided she had been betrayed, and so sent a flood of lava into Hi'iaka's 'ohi'a-lehua grove, killing Hopoe in the process. When Hi'iaka saw the smoldering trees and her dancing friend entombed in lava, she flung herself into the arms of Lohi'au. In retribution, Pele set lose another stream of lava, which killed the mortal Lohi'au, but Hi'iaka, a goddess, could not be destroyed.

Madame Pele always manages to produce some sort of excitement for her guests. On this day in 1924 it was a huge steam eruption in Kilauea caldera.
The legend has a happy ending, however, as yet another brother of Pele's, Kane-milo-hai, reached out and caught Lohi'au's spirit when he saw it floating past his canoe. He restored the spirit to Lohi'au's body, and once again, the chief was brought back to life. Hi'iaka and Lohi'au returned to Kaua'i to live contentedly.

Legends about Pele, her rivals and her lovers abound. Most of the lovers she took were not lucky enough to escape with their lives when she hurled molten lava at them, trapping them in odd misshapen pillars of rock that dot volcanic fields to this day.

One lover who proved a match for Pele was Kamapua'a, a demi-god who hid the bristles that grew down his back by wearing a cape. The pig god could also appear as a plant or as various types of fish. He and Pele were at odds from the beginning; she covered the land with barren lava, he brought torrents of rain to extinguish her fires and called the wild boars to dig up the land, softening it so seeds could grow.

Pele and Kamapua'a raged against each other until her brothers begged her to give in, as they feared Kamapua'a's storms would soak all the fire sticks and kill Pele's power to restore fire. In Puna, at a place called Ka-lua-o-Pele, where the land seems torn up as if a great struggle had taken place, legend says Kamapua'a finally caught and ravaged Pele. The two remained tempestuous lovers, it is said, until a child was born, then Kamapua'a sailed away and Pele went back to her philandering ways.

Pele's greatest rival was Poliahu, goddess of snow-capped mountains, and a beauty who, like Pele, seduced handsome mortal chiefs. Pele's jealousy flamed after she had a fling with a fickle young Maui chief named 'Ai-wohi-ku-pua, as he was traveling to the Big Island to court a mortal chiefess, Laie. Paddling along the Hana Coast, 'Ai-wohi-ku-pua saw Pele in human form as a beauty named Hina-i-ka-malama, riding the surf. He paused for a brief affair. Then he went on to the Big Island, where Poliahu seduced him. He convinced his personal goddess to release him from his promise to his first love, and went back to Kaua'i with the snow goddess. Pele (as Hina-i-ka-malama) chased after them, eventually winning back the fickle chief, but Poliahu was so vindictive, she blasted the lovers with cold and heat until they separated, and 'Ai-wohi-ku-pua was left with no lover at all.

According to Hawaiian historian David Malo in his book "Hawaiian Antiquities," in old Hawai'i, some gods and goddesses, including Pele, were believed to be akua noho, gods who talked. They could take possession of an earthly being, who became the god's kahu. Malo writes, "The kahu of the Pele deities also were in the habit of dressing their hair in such a way as to make it stand out at great length, then, having inflamed and reddened their eyes, they went about begging for any articles they took a fancy to, making the threat, 'If you don't grant this request, Pele will devour you.' Many people were imposed upon in this manner, fearing Pele might actually consume them." Naturally, people who had seen others destroyed in Pele's fiery lava flows, were terrorized by such a kahu.

Pele has continued to intrigue contemporary men. Not long after the old religion was abolished in 1819, the high chiefess Kapi'olani defied Pele by eating 'ohelo berries at the edge of Halema'uma'u caldera without first offering them to or requesting Pele's permission. In open defiance, Kapi'olani threw stones into the molten lava below. When she was not harmed, she insisted it proved Pele had no power and it was time for Hawaiian people to accept Christianity as their religion. In 1823, when Reverend William Ellis became the first white man to visit Kilauea, most Hawaiians accompanying the expedition were still in awe of the volatile goddess. The hungry missionaries began to eat 'ohelo berries, but were quickly warned to give Pele an offering. Ellis wrote, "We told them ...that we acknowledged Jehovah as the only divine proprietor of the fruits of this earth, and felt thankful to Him for them, especially in our present circumstances."...We traveled on, regretting that the natives should indulge in notions so superstitious." At the crater, the Hawaiian guides "turned their faces toward the place where the greatest quantity of smoke and vapor issued, and, breaking the ('ohelo) branch they held in their hand in two, they threw one part down the precipice, saying:

E Pele, eia ka 'ohelo 'au;
(Oh, Pele, here are your branches)
e taumaha aku wau 'ia 'oe
(I offer some to you)
e 'ai ho'i au tetahi
(some I also eat).

To this day, tales of Pele's power and peculiarities continue. Whispered encounters with Pele include those of drivers who pick up an old woman dressed all in white accompanied by a little dog on roads in Kilauea National Park, only to look in the mirror to find the back seat empty. Pele's face has mysteriously appeared in photographs of fiery eruptions, and most people who live in the islands-whether Christian, Buddhist, Shinto, or other-speak respectfully of the ancient goddess. After all, she has destroyed more than 100 structures on the Big Island since 1983, and perhaps even more awesome than that, she has added more than 70 acres of land to the island's southeastern coastline.

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What

Koa (Acacia koa)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

Koa trees are the tallest and the second most abundant endemic tree in the Hawaiian forest. The largest Koa trees are possibly the last remaining old growth trees in Hawaii, spared from logging and clear cutting for cattle ranching. The smaller koa can sprout from roots of nearby older koa and spread by seeds. Light gaps in the forest are perfect for this sun-loving species. Koa means "brave" and "bold" and "valiant", as well as "warrior", in Hawaiian. A very hard wood used for making weapons, surfboards, and canoes. In Hawaiian culture, it is said that if an ʻelepaio bird is found pecking on the trunk of a potential Koa, the canoe builder would pass it by knowing it was insect infected and so not a good choice.

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What

Warbling White-Eye (Zosterops japonicus)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

The Japanese White-eye (Zosterops japonicus) - also known as the mejiro - is native to much of east Asia, including Japan, China, Vietnam,Taiwan, and the Philippines.
It has been intentionally introduced to other parts of the world as a pet and as pest control, with mixed results.
As one of the native species of the Japanese islands, it has been depicted in Japanese art on numerous occasions, and historically was kept as a cage bird.
Introduced to Hawaii in 1929 as a means of insect control, it has since become a common bird on the Hawaiian Islands, and has become a vector for avian parasites that are now known to adversely affect populations of native birds such as Hawaiian honeycreepers, as well as spreading invasive plant species through discarded seeds.

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What

ʻAmaʻu (Sadleria cyatheoides)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

This beautiful native fern is one of the first plants to pioneer fresh lava flows. They can grow in desert areas, as well as in moister areas and dense rain forests, as well as on rocky cliffs of canyons.

The young 'Ama'u fronds are reddish colored and turn to the more familiar green once they age. It is thought that the red pigment may serve as a defense against the strong tropical sunlight.

To polytheistic Hawaiians, ʻamaʻu is one of the forms that the pig demigod Kamapuaʻa assumes at will.

A red dye was extracted from the young fronds as well as the cortex of trunks of larger plants for kapa (tapa)

The plants with other ingredients were pounded to make a juice applied to boils and pimples. The shoots were used for lung troubles, and inner bark pounded for asthma.

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What

Hawaiian Goose (Branta sandvicensis)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Description

At least nine species of geese evolved in the Islands, probably from ancestors much like the Canada goose. Eight of these species were flightless and probably grazed on the plants of the ancient Hawaiian landscape. Extinction of these flightless geese resulted from hunting by Polynesians and land use changes in Hawai`i's lowlands.

Our remaining goose is also a herbivore. Though it is a strong and frequent flyer, its short wings, long legs and reduced webbing between its toes indicate that it often walks and seldom swims.

Perhaps 25,000 nēnē existed in Hawai`i when Captain Cook arrived in 1778. By the mid 1940's only 50 birds remained. Populations were drastically reduced by introduced predators such as mongooses, cats and dogs; by foraging animals such as cattle, goats and pigs; by hunters; by introduced plants which compete with native food and cover plants; and by loss of lowland habitat.

In the 1970's, Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park began a captive nēnē breeding and reintroduction program. But, several factors hinder population increases. Mongooses and feral cats kill adults and goslings. Automobiles hit and kill nene along roadways. Nēnē that are attracted to the grassy fairways of golf courses suffer injury or death by errant golf balls. In upland habitats, nutrition is usually not adequate for gosling growth requirements.

Nēnē will probably always need our help to survive. Currently, Park staff use a variety of techniques to improve nēnē breeding success: controlling predators in nesting habitat, mowing pastures, closing sensitive brooding areas to the public, and maintaining predator-resistant enclosures in which free-flying birds can rest, feed, or nest. We continue to search for improved and more efficient ways to encourage population growth.

Park biologists mark both wild and captive-reared nēnē with leg bands to facilitate identification and tracking of individual birds. Usually, this is done when birds are young and cannot yet fly. From banding and subsequent monitoring, we have learned much about nēnē family and flock life. If this population persists in the coming years, we will doubtless learn more about the behavior, biology, and ecology of this unique, terrestrial goose.

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What

ʻŌhiʻa Lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha)

Observer

rangermichael

Date

August 1, 2016

Place

KVC (Google, OSM)

Description

Is the dominant tree of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Look closely at the upper canopy foliage; it is grey-green in color because of the dense mat of minute hairs that clothe the ʻōhiʻa leaves. This is the pioneer form of the tree that colonizes new lava flows and ash deposits in the Kilauea area. The endemic ʻōhiʻaʻs hard wood was the only wood used for building heiau and for carving images of the gods. ʻ Ōhiʻa blossoms are considered sacred to the volcano goddess Pele and provide nectar for native birds. Hawaiian custom tells us that if you pick a Lehua flower, it will surely rain.

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