Projects
Native Plants
One of the greatest limitations to landscape-level restoration of Haleakalā’s leeward watershed forests is the availability of native seeds to fulfill the quantity of seedlings required for restoration at this scale. The remote location, extremely rugged and variable landscape and the cost, danger and difficulty of access exacerbate the problem of an already tremendously reduced native ecosystem. Much of the biodiversity has been lost, with more than 70% of native birds and over 30% of native plants now endangered and countless species, scents, colors, and ecological adaptations unique to Hawai’i’s island biogeography lost forever due to extinction.
Kahikinui
We provide ongoing support to the Department of Hawaiian Homelands and Ka 'Ohana Kahikinui in their efforts to settle and restore the 23,000 acre moku of Kahikinui through cooperative, community based habitat restoration and experiential learning.