- Hibiscadelphus distans
taxobox
name = "Hibiscadelphus distans"
image_caption = "Hibiscadelphus distans" growing inLimahuli Garden and Preserve
status = CR
status_system = IUCN2.3
regnum =Plantae
unranked_divisio =Angiosperms
unranked_classis =Eudicots
unranked_ordo =Rosids
ordo =Malvales
familia =Malvaceae
genus = "Hibiscadelphus "
species = "H. distans"
binomial = "Hibiscadelphus distans"
binomial_authority = Bishop & Herbst, 1973|"Hibiscadelphus distans" (Hawaiian hau kuahiwi) is one of the world's rarest trees and can only be found on the island of Kauaokinai, Hawaiokinai.
"H. distans" is a shrub or small tree up to 18 feet (5.5 m) tall with smooth bark and a rounded crown. The leaves are heart-shaped and covered with star-shaped hairs. The flower is about 1 inch (3.5 cm) long and barely opens.
It is found within low to mid-elevations, between 1,000 to 1,800 feet in highly degraded remnants of native dryland forests. The substrate is basaltic bedrock overlain by dry, crumbly red-brown soil.
There are only two known naturally occurring populations with an estimated total of 80 to 200 trees. The original population, found in 1972, was located within the State-owned Nā Pali Kona Forest Reserve, Koaiokinae Canyon. In 1989, this population was destroyed by a landslide. Three botanical gardens in Hawaiokinai have cultivated this plant species:
National Tropical Botanical Garden on Kauaokinai, andWaimea Valley andLyon Arboretum on Ookinaahu.The original habitat of "H. distans" is a remnant of a native, open, dryland forest. The mean temperature ranges from 18.5 to 25.7 °C (65 to 78 °F). [http://fwie.fw.vt.edu/WWW/esis/lists/e701050.htm]
Despite the extreme rarity of "H. distans", it actually has the largest wild population of any "
Hibiscadelphus " species. Five of the other six species are extinct or extinct in the wild (four were only ever known from a single wild tree), the exception being "H. woodii" (also from Kauaokinai), which is known from only four individuals.
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