Articles tagged with: Ecology

Natural History of Hawaii

Tags: volcanoes, evolution, ecology, biogeography and weather

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Big Island. Big Dreams. Big Adventures.
Often referred to as one of the world’s greatest natural history stories, the incredible legacy of the Hawaiian island chain begins with geology. Trillions of tons of rock, driven up from the earth’s molten mantle through a localized hot spot, created...
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Beach Botanizing

Tags: ecology, botany

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

I visited a splendid place today. My companions were a small group of plant lovers from the Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden and Clyde Imada from Bishop Museum as chief identifier. Our destination was a remote coastal area in Kau. It wasn’t an easy journey. The path took us through dry, weed...
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Tour of a Plant Museum

Tags: invasive species, ecology, conservation, botany

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

I remember my first visit into a world-class museum. It was the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco. I cannot recall what works of art I saw, nor even the artists. Nevertheless, I remember the great sense of anticipation I felt. I remember the immaculate polished floors, the immense scale of...
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The Gentleman Farmer

Tags: invasive species, history and legends, ecology, botany

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Don Francisco de Paula Marin. This is only known image of Marin and is taken from an engraving showing Hawaiian chiefs meeting with European sea captains. Don Francisco de Paula Marin was a productive man. He arrived in Hawaii two hundred years ago after deserting a Spanish naval ship in the...
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Rock and Trees

Tags: history and legends, ecology, botany

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Joseph F. Rock I am a book nut. Sometimes I think my fascination with nature is just a highly rationalized excuse to buy books. Anything new that hits the shelves, I get it. Plus, I’m constantly on the search for the out-of-print titles that have anything to do with Hawaiiana. The ones that...
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Natural Encounters

Tags: volcanoes, ecology

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

I love my work. Most days I find myself along a trail in a forest full of birdsong or stepping across cascading streams. Other days are spent in pursuit of hot lava, steam vents, lava tubes, pit craters, and earth cracks in the world-class setting of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. I meet new...
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The Essence of Honeycreeperness

Tags: evolution, ecology, conservation, birds

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Iiwi Photo by Jack Jeffrey Once Hawaii was for the birds. Before the arrival of humans, it was birds, not mammals, which dominated the environment. Today Hawaii’s native forest birds are disappearing. Nearly half of the 140 bird species that were known from historic times are extinct and over 50...
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A Super Atlas

Tags: history and legends, ecology, biogeography and weather

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

I get excited about books. When I find something on the shelf I've wanted or never seen before, my heart gets pumping and I usually buy it without a thought to finance. The other day I plucked down $79.00 for the recently published third edition of the Atlas of Hawaii. First thing about the book...
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Koppen’s Climates

Tags: volcanoes, ecology, biogeography and weather

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Hawaii is a place of extreme climates. But that’s not what a mid-western couple planning their once-in-a-lifetime, mid-winter, Hawaiian dream vacation wants to hear. Nor is it a fact that the marketers of Hawaii Visitors and Conventions Bureau spread through glossy literature. But a fact it is....
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Inventory of a Koa

Tags: non-bird animals, ecology, botany, birds

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Koa Tree
It is a big tree. It rises above the canopy of the kipuka with sculptured grace. Its trunk is as thick as a bus. The branches are larger than most other trees’ trunks. It is a Koa. I visit the tree often, with hundreds of visits over the years. Only after a dozen visits did I see how...
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A Walk a Weekend

Tags: history and legends, ecology

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

In 1993 nearly five hundred hikers hit the trail and walked the entire length of the Ala Kahakai in one day. This “trail by the sea” runs two hundred miles from Upolu Point in Kohala to the Hilo side of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. The event that brought these hikers together was National...
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Over the Hump

Tags: volcanoes, ecology, biogeography and weather

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

Let’s take a quick ride over the Saddle Road. It is a stunning and scenic fifty miles that crosses over the island between the great volcanic mountains Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. Though it passes through a large expanse of Parker Ranch, Saddle Road is not named for our paniolo heritage. At its...
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Creative Isolation

Tags: evolution, ecology, conservation, botany, birds, biogeography and weather

Posted: Aug 8, 2010

This summer the Pope and I came to an understanding. If you account for a Supreme Being, he said, the Vatican doesn’t have a problem with evolutionary theory. He went further to suggest that to view “life in terms of an ‘ongoing creation’ is a scenario that makes increasing sense, scientifically...
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