Inside the race to save the tree supporting Hawaii’s flora, fauna and culture.

Disease Could Kill Most of The Big Island’s 鈥極hi鈥榓 Forests Within 20 Years

Inside the race to save the tree supporting Hawaii’s flora, fauna and culture.

(Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Ten years ago, a mysterious new disease was found sweeping through Hawaii鈥檚 native 鈥榦hi鈥榓 forests, killing off the foundation of the islands鈥 ecology and one of the state鈥檚 most culturally important trees.

Now, researchers are in a race against time. They say most of the vast 鈥榦hi鈥榓 forests on Hawaii island will be gone in the next 20 years if what鈥檚 come to be known as Rapid 鈥極hi鈥榓 Death 鈥 ROD 鈥 isn鈥檛 stopped.

That has teams of scientists gunning to better understand how the fungal disease works to help state and federal land managers better protect the vulnerable forests. 

Recently, some promising developments have occurred. They include a novel beetle repellent to keep away the tiny bugs that help infect the 鈥榦hi鈥榓 trees with the virus and a $1 million grant to study whether the chemistry makes some trees more resistant than others.

A victim of Rapid Ohia Death stands bare Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. A genetic test verified the tree鈥檚 demise. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
A victim of Rapid 鈥極hi鈥檃 Death stands bare in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. A genetic test verified the cause of the tree鈥檚 demise. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Ultimately, saving the 鈥榦hi鈥榓, a plant unique to Hawaii on which thousands of other plant and animal species , will require more money.

In January, a multi-agency working group is set to release its latest five-year plan to fight the disease. State land officials say carrying the plan out could require as much as $8 million per year 鈥 about double the amount called for in earlier plans.

The previous , covering 2020 to 2024, called for just over $4 million per year. The researchers and managers behind that plan included only the highest priority items, but Rob Hauff, a state protection forester with the Department of Land and Natural Resources, said actual allocations fell short by up to $1 million.

He said he hopes the state and federal leaders will fully fund the next five-year plan, adding that 鈥渋t鈥檚 easy for things like this to fall off the radar.”

Climate change, meanwhile, is hastening the 鈥榦hi鈥榓 die-off. 

Warming conditions lead fast-growing invasive plants and weeds such as ginger and strawberry guava to choke out young 驶ohi驶a trees and other native plant species on the forest floor, researchers say. 

Extended drought linked to climate change further stresses the o鈥榟i鈥榓 trees, and more frequent storms leave them with broken branches with exposed bark. Those factors make them more vulnerable to the disease, according to Sarah Knox, a project coordinator with the nonprofit .

鈥淓veryone feels a pretty big sense of urgency to work on this from as many angles as we can,鈥 Knox said. 鈥淓very approach possible is being explored.鈥

The Backbone Of The Forest

The 驶ohi驶a is what researchers call a 鈥渒eystone鈥 tree for Hawaii, supporting scores of native plants, insects, birds and the overall ecology. 

The trees are strong and durable, with papery bark and trunks that twist as they grow. Their coin-shaped leaves can be either fuzzy or smooth, and their lehua blossoms come in a variety of colors, although they’re mostly red.

When the trees fall, Knox said they spend about twice as much useful time on the ground as logs, helping to nurse along new trees and plants, as when they stood upright.

On the Big Island, they鈥檙e everywhere, growing on dry lava flows and in wet, boggy areas. Their forest canopies capture the island鈥檚 fresh water supply by catching the cloud mist as it drifts by. Their shade keeps that moisture from evaporating back into the sky. The forest ground cover can slow the water’s flow and prevent flooding.

The tree also plays an integral role in traditional Hawaiian cosmology and belief, according to , a senior professor at the University of Hawaii’s Hawai鈥榠nuiakea School of Hawaiian Knowledge.

It’s closely linked to Pele, the Hawaiian goddess of fire and volcanoes and . Hula dancers would often collect its flowers and leaves to craft lei and make offerings to .

Hawaiians also used 鈥榦hi鈥榓 wood to create the carvings that adorned their stone temples, Kame鈥榚leihiwa said. Those carvings made the temples a sacred place for the akua, or divine elements, to inhabit.

'艑hi'a lehua flowers bloom high atop the canopy Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. These healthy trees are in a section protected from pigs. Other sections of the park show signs of Rapid Ohia Death (ROD). (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
驶Ohi驶a lehua flowers bloom high atop the canopy in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park in a section protected from pigs. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Halau, or Hawaiian hula groups, still gather those flowers and leaves, although researchers now advise those groups not to take them to neighboring islands to avoid spreading the disease. 

ROD, caused by a fungus called ceratocystis, has been found in some forest pockets of Kauai, Oahu and Maui but has yet to explode across those islands as it has on the Big Island. 

In the past decade, the disease has killed between 1 and 2 million trees in Hawaii, according to Flint Hughes, a Hilo-based research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service. 

Overall, Hawaii has some 300 million 驶ohi驶a remaining, but Hughes and others said ROD disproportionately affects the limited pool of 17 million large, more mature trees that predominantly make up the forests. Hughes said the infected forest plots that are being watched tend to lose about 10% of their trees per year.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why it鈥檚 so dire,鈥 he said.

There鈥檚 some disagreement among the Hawaiian halau and broader community over what collection practices remain acceptable given the threat, and wildlife officials are trying to draft clearer guidelines, according , a forest entomologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Roy and other researchers have recently been studying precisely how the disease spreads at higher forest elevations. 鈥淧eople want to blame one thing for spreading ROD, but different things can happen at different places,鈥 she said.

Roy has been developing a wax-like repellent that, when applied to an 驶ohi驶a tree’s trunk, could trick the ambrosia beetles into staying away. It would release pheromones that make the beetles think the tree is already dead, she said, and not worth boring into.

United States Forest Service entomologist Kylle Roy shows an ambrosia beetle鈥檚 fass on a Rapid Ohia Death victim Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. An ambrosia beetle鈥檚 fass is exactly 500 microns and leaves behind evidence of their activity. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
U.S. Forest Service entomologist Kylle Roy shows an ambrosia beetle鈥檚 frass on a Rapid 鈥極hi鈥榓 Death victim in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. An ambrosia beetle鈥檚 frass is exactly 500 microns and leaves behind evidence of their activity. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
United States Forest Service entomologist Kylle Roy shows an ambrosia beetle鈥檚 fass on a Rapid Ohia Death victim Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. An ambrosia beetle鈥檚 fass is exactly 500 microns and leaves behind evidence of their activity. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
Roy has been developing a wax-like repellent that, when applied to an 驶ohi驶a tree’s trunk, could trick the ambrosia beetles into staying away. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Trying to stop Rapid 驶Ohi驶a Death is personal to Roy as a Native Hawaiian.

“It鈥檚 so clear on the Big Island how important it is. It is the native forest and everything depends on it,” she said. “I decided, once I was really in it, that I鈥檓 dedicating my life to saving 鈥榦hi鈥榓.鈥

Roy’s repellent would need state approval, which it could gain later this year for widespread use under what’s called a Special Local Need registration, according to Greg Takeshima, the state Department of Agriculture’s Acting Plant Industry Administrator.

If the state approves it, the repellent could be applied in the 鈥榦hi鈥榓 forests even as it awaits final approval from the Environmental Protection Agency, Takeshima added. If the EPA raises any concerns then crews would have to stop until those issues are resolved.

Trekking Through The Forest Floor

During a recent field survey of 驶ohi驶a trees in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, the difference between healthy forest areas and those afflicted by disease and rampant pig activity was stark.

鈥淚f you look up, you can see the sky,” Roy said, pointing up at dead canopy branches whose leaves previously helped block some of the light streaming through. Few of the native hapu鈥榰 ferns that grow on the 驶ohi驶a trees or the matte uluhe ferns that form much of the forest ground remained. Without underbrush, it was easy to walk through the area:

Trek through a damaged area of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. (Marcel Honor茅/Civil Beat/2024)

However, in a nearby healthy section that protected by fencing, thick fern covering made it difficult to move through the area:

Trek through a healthy portion of the national park that is protected by fencing. (Marcel Honor茅/Civil Beat/2024)

Many of the damaged and dying 驶ohi驶a areas in the national park are overrun with invasive plants. Stacey Torigoe, a National Park Service ecologist, works to slow the influx of those and other weeds using what are known as “bio-control” measures.

They include that feed solely on the strawberry guava, causing those plants to produce galls, or . The galls then slow the spread of the strawberry guava across the forest floor.

Keeping that understory as clear of invasive plants as possible is just as key to the effort as curbing the disease so that new trees and native species can flourish there.

Search For The Strongest Trees

Other researchers are trying to figure out what makes some trees more resilient than others 鈥 and to find those answers fast.

Tree scientists at Purdue University and the University of Wisconsin recently got a $1.1 million grant from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to study 鈥榦hi鈥榓 trees鈥 chemical defenses and what makes some more susceptible.  

The research project focuses on carbohydrates as the building blocks of those chemical defenses, said said Morgan Furze, an assistant professor at Purdue鈥檚 tropical hardwood tree improvement and regeneration center.

She and others will examine whether trees genetically capable of storing more carbohydrates can better fend off the disease when it strikes.

'艑hi'a trees are tagged and monitored Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. This helps identify which tree is thriving or succumbing to Rapid '艑hi'a Death. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
鈥極hi鈥榓 trees are tagged and monitored in the national park. This helps identify which tree is thriving or succumbing to Rapid 鈥極hi鈥榓 Death. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Often in the past decade, aerial footage taken of infected forest patches has shown a few live trees in a sea of dead ones claimed by the disease.

鈥淧erhaps if the tree stores more carb reserves, it鈥檚 better able to defend itself against the pathogens,鈥 Furze said.

The findings could help forest managers pinpoint when the trees are at their most vulnerable to the disease and when it makes the most sense for crews to spray them with fungicide.

The three-year project complements a separate effort to collect 驶ohi鈥榓 cuttings and seeds from the forest, then use them to grow new trees in a nursery to determine which are genetically the most resistant to the fungus.

That effort by the is a decades-long project because it requires growing trees big enough to seed, according to an extension forester for the University of Hawaii.

“Morgan鈥檚 research would be a big shortcut to that process of testing everything,” Friday said. “If you could go in the field and take some sort of measurement to know what鈥檚 resistant, that would really speed things up.”

With the disease threatening to annihilate Hawaii’s 驶ohi驶a forests in the next two decades, he said, that shortcut could be critical.

Still, he added, the best option is to protect all the 驶ohi驶a trees, regardless of their resiliency, to the extent that驶s possible.

鈥淚t鈥檚 much more important to protect our forests than to replant them when they鈥檙e dead,” Friday said. 鈥淗aving resistant 鈥榦hi鈥榓, it鈥檚 an important tool. But we should also be trying to protect our healthy forest.”

Protecting Fenceless Forests

One thing abundantly clear to Knox and other forest managers is that installing fences across the Big Island鈥檚 鈥榦hi鈥榓 forests would almost entirely stamp out Rapid 驶Ohi鈥榓 Death. The barriers keep out the pigs, goats and other invasive hoofed animals that can spread the fungus spores from tree to tree.

But installing fences across all 800,000 or so acres of forests 鈥 then maintaining them in that rugged terrain 鈥 simply isn鈥檛 feasible 

鈥淔ences are wonderful; they鈥檙e also expensive,鈥 Torigoe said. 

National Park Service ecologist Stacey Torigoe stands next to a closed gate to prevent pigs from moving to a section where the park is trying to staunch the spread of Rapid Ohia Death Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
National Park Service ecologist Stacey Torigoe stands next to a closed gate to prevent pigs from moving to a section where the park is trying to staunch the spread of Rapid 鈥極hi鈥榓 Death in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

The park service has about 170 miles of fencing across the Big Island鈥檚 Volcanoes National Park to keep out those hoofed animals, according to NPS spokesperson Jessica Ferracane. Maintaining and inspecting the fences is a huge job.

Since much of the national park鈥檚 nearly 72,000 acres of 驶ohi鈥榓 forest remain exposed to the pigs, researchers must continue to study the complex ways the disease spreads. 

They know that pigs contribute to the spread by rubbing against the trees and wounding them, plus they further spread the disease when they dig and kick up dirt near infected trees that’s can be filled with the deadly fungal spores.

How the beetles, the pigs, the warming climate and the trees themselves all work together to spread ROD in different forest climates remains somewhat of a mystery, one the scientists are working to solve.

鈥淲e have kind of a good understanding of the important framework. Now we鈥檙e working out, where do factors differ across landscapes that affect tree mortality?鈥 Hughes said. 鈥淎nd nailing those things down is very important for managers.鈥

Knox, for example, is trying to better understand what prompts the wild pigs to choose one tree to repeatedly rub against versus another. What attracts that pig to that tree? 

Akaka Foundation Tropical forest project coordinator Sarah Knox walks away from a wounded '艑hi'a tree Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024, in Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island. A hypothesis has arisen about pigs wounding '艑hi'a trees and spreading the Rapid '艑hi'a Death fungus. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)
Akaka Foundation Tropical forest project coordinator Sarah Knox walks away from a wounded 鈥榦hi鈥榓 tree in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. A hypothesis has arisen about pigs wounding 鈥榦hi鈥榓 trees and spreading the Rapid 鈥極hi鈥榓 Death fungus. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024)

Her team uses cameras installed in the forest to spy on the animals. They are investigating whether it would make sense to develop what she called 鈥渞ub hubs鈥 for the pigs 鈥 artificial posts that mimic the trunks.

Knox is also looking at which tree wounds are most effective at spreading the disease: those on the trunks or those on the wooden roots just under the ground. She said those findings could help crews more efficiently protect the forest.

“We鈥檙e adding to our tools as quickly as we can get them,” Knox said. “Managers only have so much manpower, time. You don鈥檛 want to send them down the wrong path.鈥

Some field surveys this summer suggested the trees鈥 fine roots even deeper in the ground may be vulnerable to infection. Researchers stress that’s far from conclusive but a major concern because of the hoofed animals, also known as ungulates.

If that’s the case, “boy, ungulates can quickly do a number on a forest because they鈥檙e wounding fine roots all the time,” Hughes said.

In Hawaiian tradition, Pele takes the 驶ohi驶a trees on as her physical form, and all Hawaiian ancestry lives on in them, according to Kame鈥檈leihiwa.

鈥淓very time a tree dies it鈥檚 like one of our family dies, it鈥檚 really heartbreaking to us,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t is a special, sacred tree. There鈥檚 a spirit of Ku 鈥 the spirit of energy that comes from the earth to the sky,” she added. The trees, she said, “become a sacred house for those elements to live in.鈥

“It would be wonderful if the scientists could learn how to stop the disease,” Kame鈥榚leihiwa said.

Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of climate change is supported by The Healy Foundation, Marisla Fund of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.

Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of environmental issues on Hawaii Island is supported in part by a grant from the Dorrance Family Foundation.

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