When Julia Diegmann started working for the Kaua鈥檌 Forest Bird Recovery Project in 2010, she could reliably see two endemic forest birds, 鈥楢办颈办颈办颈 and 鈥槾“毂鸢毂疴榚, from the parking lot of the Pihea Trailhead on the island of Kaua鈥榠. Today, that is no longer the case thanks to a gauntlet of threats the birds face. 鈥楢办颈办颈办颈, 鈥槾“毂鸢毂疴榚, and other native Hawaiian birds have declined rapidly due to habitat loss, introduced predators, invasive plants and insects, and avian malaria. But a lesser-known threat also looms: a fungal disease that kills 鈥樑峢i鈥榓, one of the primary trees on which the birds depend for food and shelter. 鈥淭hey are getting hit from all sides,鈥 says Diegmann, now the outreach specialist for the project.
An umbrella term for five endemic tree species and a dozen varieties across the Hawaiian Islands 鈥攖he most prominent being 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 lehua鈥斺樑峢i鈥榓 play an important role in Hawaiian culture and the native forests. The trees grow widely from sea level up to and survive in deserts and rainforests. An adaptable plant, 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 is one of the first species to sprout from barren lava, but also thrives as tall canopy trees in mature forest. The tree comprises 80 percent of native Hawaiian forests, supporting , mosses, ferns, butterflies, insects, and birds. And yet, in less than a decade, the new fungal disease has become a serious threat to 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 and the flora and fauna they support.
鈥溾樑宧i鈥榓 are the most important habitat species, so if we suddenly lost them all we鈥檇 be in big trouble,鈥 says Bret Nainoa Mossman, an avian biologist with the Hawai鈥榠 Division of Forestry and Wildlife.
Nearly every Hawaiian forest bird relies on 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 to some extent. The tree鈥檚 vibrant yellow, orange, and red feathery blooms feed 鈥楢papane, 鈥業鈥榠wi, and other endemic honeycreepers with their nectar and, eventually, fruit. Other species, like Kiwikiu, creep along the tree鈥檚 trunk, peeling off bark to extract hidden larvae. And 鈥樑峢i鈥榓鈥檚 dense canopy provides shelter from predators, as well as critical nesting sites.
on Hawai鈥榠 Island, the fungal disease swept through lower elevation forests of Puna, killing 98 percent of 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 trees in the region within several years. 鈥淚t was private landowners who started saying, 鈥楬ey, these trees are dying in a way we鈥檝e never seen before鈥,鈥 says J.B. Friday, a forester with the University of Hawai鈥榠 at M膩noa. 鈥淚t turns out they were quite right鈥攊t was a new thing.鈥 In 2014, scientists identified two fungi, Ceratocystis huliohia and Ceratocystis lukiohia, as the . Their origins still unknown, the fungi likely hitchhiked to Hawai鈥榠 on a plant or mutated from a different fungus introduced to the island. The less deadly fungus, Ceratocystis huliohia, probably existed at low levels on Hawai鈥榠 Island for decades, experts speculate, but was only discovered because of the large number of trees dying from the aggressive one.
Though Ceratocystis lukiohia is more virulent, the two fungi act similarly, clogging 鈥樑峢i鈥榓鈥檚 vascular system and depriving the canopy of water. 鈥淭he water gets clogged, like your kitchen sink on Thanksgiving Day,鈥 says Kim Rogers, outreach specialist for the and 爆料公社 magazine contributor. Once showing signs of infection, the trees can die in weeks or even days, giving rise to the disease's common name: rapid 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 death, or ROD. 鈥淵ou can see a perfectly healthy looking 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 tree and the next month [you] go out, and all of a sudden the entire canopy is reddish-brown and the tree鈥檚 dead,鈥 Rogers says.
The disease鈥檚 prevalence on Hawai鈥榠 Island鈥攎ore than a million 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 have died from the disease, already鈥攊s largely the result of introduced beetles and ungulates, such as feral goats, pigs, and cattle. Ambrosia beetles , releasing excrement, tree shavings, and fungal spores, which become airborne or fall to the ground, hitchhiking on invasive predators or human boots. Ungulates damage the trees with their hooves, and those wounds provide easy access for a fungal spore to take root. Research by Ryan Perroy, a geographer at the University of Hawai鈥榠 at Hilo revealed that in fenced, ungulate-free areas, from ROD.
To reduce the disease鈥檚 spread, officials prohibited transporting 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 between islands in 2016. Still, the aggressive fungus was detected Kaua鈥榠 in 2018. 鈥淚 have suspicion that someone unknowingly brought some infected wood over,鈥 Friday says. So far, the more lethal fungus hasn鈥檛 appeared outside Kaua鈥榠 and Hawai鈥榠 Island鈥攕urprising because Maui lies less than 30 miles from the latter鈥攂ut accidentally introducing the fungus elsewhere is highly plausible. With no known cure, the possibility of the deadly disease spreading to other islands is a steady source of stress for ecologists working to save the trees.
To understand how the loss of 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 could affect native bird populations throughout the island chain, Rick Camp, a quantitative ecologist at the U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center, took advantage of bird counts completed in the lower Puna region of Hawai鈥榠 Island in 2003 and 2004, comparing them to follow-up surveys in the same area in 2016, after ROD wiped out a majority of the 鈥樑峢i鈥榓. His results provided a glimpse into the future if , finding striking changes in the bird community.
The most worrisome result, says Camp, was that 鈥楢makihi, a native forest bird, declined by 70 percent. Before ROD, 鈥楢makihi鈥檚 numbers there had increased between the 1990s and early 2000s, and the population seemed surprisingly resilient, surviving even when living side by side with mosquitoes and avian malaria. 鈥淪eventy-plus percent decline in 鈥楢makihi was as much shocking as it was alarming,鈥 Camp says.
Also concerning was that the surveys documented Saffron Finch and Yellow-fronted Canary, two non-natives, only in 2016; both species prefer shrubbier habitat over dense canopies, reflecting a shift in the forest composition. Another non-native bird, Warbling White-eye, dropped by 30 percent. Both the Warbling White-eye and 鈥楢makihi are more generalist species鈥攖hey don鈥檛 rely on 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 completely鈥攕o Camp says these declines reveal the real danger when the disease spreads unchecked. 鈥淚t鈥檚 actually hitting everything.鈥
These results and the devastating loss of 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 in Hawai鈥榠 Island鈥檚 lower elevation forests rang alarm bells. Fortunately, the fungi prefer warmer temperatures, so the cooler upper elevation forests on Hawai鈥榠 Island, where more of the endemic forest birds live, have been cushioned from the full brunt of the disease. But it has spread into mid-elevation forests around Hawai鈥榠 Volcanoes National Park, and similar to what has happened with the island's malaria-laden mosquitos, warming temperatures could tip the balance, making higher elevations hospitable for the fungi.
Currently, Kaua鈥榠鈥檚 endemics face more imminent danger from ROD. At least 300 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 on the island have died from the disease, including one tree close to the last refuge for endangered forest birds on the Alaka鈥榠 Plateau. For and , two critically endangered honeycreepers on Kaua鈥榠, avian malaria and habitat loss have shrunk their available habitat to an area less than 16 square miles鈥攁 drastic reduction from their historical range across most of Kaua鈥榠. If ROD wipes out 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 here, the birds have nowhere else to go. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the only place where these birds persist on earth,鈥 Diegmann says. 鈥淭o lose even more habitat for them would be devastating, just devastating.鈥
Ecologically, experts say the loss of 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 would have far-reaching consequences: 鈥樑宧i鈥榓 help maintain a healthy forest and watershed, critical for drinking water, with cascading effects on the entire island ecosystem. 鈥淚f we have a healthy watershed, we have a healthy ocean and a healthy coral reef,鈥 Diegmann says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just 鈥榮ave the birds,鈥 it鈥檚 鈥榮ave the whole ecosystem鈥.鈥
Losing 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 would also be a blow to Hawaii鈥檚 culture. Associated with guardian spirits and Hawaiian gods, respectively, Hawaii鈥檚 honeycreepers and 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 feature prominently in traditional stories, songs, chants, and hula. Native Hawaiians used 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 wood to build houses and canoes, flowers to make leis, and leaves to drink as tea. And vibrant bird feathers, particularly from the scarlet 鈥業鈥榠wi, adorned helmets, capes, and long, of the ruling class. 鈥淭o lose any of those ancestors or individuals, be it 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 or the birds, would be a huge loss for this place and culture and what makes Hawai鈥榠 , Hawai鈥榠 ,鈥 says Rachel Kingsley, an outreach associate with the Maui Forest Bird Recovery Project.
With so much at risk, Hawaii鈥檚 scientists, volunteers, and residents have responded quickly to protect 鈥樑峢i鈥榓. Signs at trailheads, equipped with boot-brush cleaning stations and disinfectant spray, inform hikers about ROD鈥檚 prevalence. Biologists take extra caution to avoid transporting the microscopic fungus spores accidentally. Before and after field work, they clean vehicles and gear, inside and out, and . 鈥淚 like to say leave the mud where you find it,鈥 Rogers says. In 2018, the governor declared as 鈥樑宧i鈥榓 Lehua Day. Organizations like the Kaua鈥檌 Invasive Species Committee give away free sanitation kits and 鈥 to raise awareness and encourage action to protect the trees.
Meanwhile, scientists continue to brainstorm new ways to save 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 and the forest birds. Currently, they are investigating if particular 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 varieties can survive once infected, and then breeding those survivors to create 鈥樑峢i鈥榓 fully resistant to ROD. These resilient seedlings would be good candidates for forest restoration. Unlikely to fully eradicate ROD from the islands, the biologists believe such efforts to reduce the spread and develop ROD-resistant trees could work, and are enough to keep hope alive amid a daunting predicament. 鈥淲e want those forests to still be there," Mossman says, "because the birds will undoubtedly be there again if we give them the opportunity."