Palm Plight
Assaulted by myriad threats to their survival, palm species around the world face the likelihood of extinction
- By Mike Grudowski
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2002, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Habitat destruction compounds the problems. Over the centuries, much of Hawaii has been burned, bulldozed and built up with cane and pineapple fields, towns, condominiums, hotels, marinas and golf courses. The lowland dry forest, where native palms once dominated, has taken the hardest hit; more than 96 percent of it is gone.
Unethical plant collectors make things worse still. The only four P.viscosa palms known to exist in the wild grow along the Powerline Trail on the eastern side of Kauai. Not long ago, NTBG botanists were thrilled to discover a fifth, a seedling that had sprung up alongside the others. When the scientists returned to the site, the seedling was gone, with a gaping hole and telltale shovel marks in its place.
As daunting as these combined threats are, hope remains. On the north shore of Kauai, NTBG is restoring Pritchardia to the wild in a 1,000-acre preserve. But most of the Pritchardia seeds Wood and his fellow scientists bring back from their expeditions get planted in the garden’s 286-acre grounds on Kauai’s south shore. There and in other protected tracts, the staff is cultivating a kind of botanical menagerie of rare palms, in hopes of preserving as much genetic diversity as possible. These plants provide a significant hedge against the possibility of extinction. Those four P. viscosa beside the Powerline Trail, for instance, now have 16 cousins growing in captivity.
Several groups are trying to save Hawaii’s palms by protecting their habitat. About two million acres of native forest and scrubland remain intact, according to the Nature Conservancy, and a quarter of them are managed by federal or state agencies, or private groups. Both national parks in Hawaii have fenced off large areas and eradicated pigs and goats. On Maui, Oahu and Molokai, a number of land partnerships have been formed in recent years, bringing together all manner of public and private landowners in cooperative efforts to thin out invasive species and protect native ones.
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