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Kalaupapa National Historical Park
Huelo Islet, Relict of Prehistoric Lowland Forests
 
Loulu, Prichardia hillebrandii, on Huelo Islet.
Photo by Ken Wood, National Tropical Garden.
The relict loulu forest on Huelo Islet is typical of lowland forest ecosystems in Hawaii before human settlement.
 

Sediment cores from widespread archeology studies show that loulu palm forests predominated in Hawaii’s prehistoric lowlands.  Polynesian colonists arriving in about 300 AD introduced new competing plants, the Polynesian rat, and cleared and burned these native forests for agriculture.  Thereafter the endemic palm forests went into steep decline.  Today they survive intact only on this tiny Huelo Islet, safe from rats that eat the seeds and alien competing plants.

Brighamia rockii
Plants
of Kalaupapa (illustrated)
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Brighamia rockii
Kalaupapa Herbarium
photographs
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yellow tang
Fishes
of Kalaupapa NHP (illustrated)
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Starfish
Marine invertebrates
of Kalaupapa NHP (illustrated)
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Gravesite  

Did You Know?
There are fourteen cemeteries located at Kalaupapa reflecting both the religious and cultural affiliations of its residents: Catholic, Protestant, Mormon, Buddhist, and Hawaiian. Inscriptions are in Hawaiian, Chinese, Japanese and English.

Last Updated: January 02, 2008 at 15:30 EST