“Many native species in Hawaii are not fire-resistant,” said botanist and environmental researcher Katie Kamelamela. “That will have a big impact.”
Hawaii’s volcanic islands, variety of biomes and isolation from the continental U.S. have produced species unlike those seen elsewhere, Kamelamela said. Flowers like the ko’oloa’ula and pua‘ala have long been endangered, and can only be found on the archipelago.
In parts of Hawaii that are becoming increasingly dry, wildfires have always been a threat. Kamelamela says she’s seen their impact before. As a botanist, she’s worked at reforestation sites making the slow uphill climb of restoring the islands’ native plant life. All of it can be wiped out with a single spark, she said.
“I’ve worked on a fire site in Oahu, which is the island I grew up on,” she said. “It was a project to reforest with native species. We got like 15 years into it, and it burned.”
Some native plants can gradually recover from wildfires. Others, she said, become “total matchsticks, unrecoverable.”
This fire was uniquely brutal, she said.
How it got this bad
A destructive combination of factors — including winds from Hurricane Dora, an unusually dry climate and flammable invasive plant species — aligned to make this wildfire uniquely widespread and dangerous, Lakshmi said.
Nonnative shrubs and grass were introduced to Hawaii from other parts of the world over time to help resist droughts, given their ability to survive extreme heat and dryness. This strategy, experts say, has backfired.
“There were a lot of invasive species which took root and came quickly to life after the last fire, and especially survived a drought,” Lakshmi said, referring to wildfires on the islands in 2018.
Those species make it easier for a wildfire to quickly light up large swaths of land, he said, and they also bounce back much faster than native plants.
“They come back faster than the native species,” he said….
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