Cyanea pilosa

A.Gray (1861)

This name is accepted

Kingdom: Viridiplantae Phylum: Magnoliophyta Class/Clade: Eudicot-Asterids Order: Asterales Family: Campanulaceae Genus: Cyanea

hāhā [haha]

Description

Key Characters:

Growth Form: Shrubs 0.8–2 m tall.

Stems: Stems subherbaceous, woody only at base, unbranched or rarely sparingly branched from base, pubescent.

Roots:

Leaves: Leaves simple. Alternate. Blades broadly elliptic to broadly obovate, blades 15–42 cm long, 8–15 cm wide. Apex acuminate. Base rounded to cuneate. Upper surfaces green, pubescent; lower surfaces whitish green, densely pubescent. Margins erose. Petioles 3–9 cm long. Stipules absent.

Flowers: Flowers in inflorescences 6–28–flowered, pubescent, peduncles 15–110 mm long, rachis 5–70 mm long, pedicels 5–10 mm long. Flowers bisexual (perfect); hypanthium obovoid, 4–6 mm long. Calyx lobes narrowly triangular, 2–5 mm long, apex acuminate. Corolla white tinged or streaked with purple, 20–28 mm long, 3–4 mm wide, glabrous, the tube suberect to gently curved, the lobes spreading, ¼–⅓ as long as the tube. Stamens 5, alternate with corolla lobes, connate; staminal column white, pubescent toward apex; anthers white, pubescent, the lower 2 with apical tufts of white hairs. Ovary inferior, 2-celled; ovule placentation axile; stigma 2-lobed, wet or dry, appressed and nonreceptive as the style grows through the anther tube, pushing out the pollen, after which the stigmas spread apart and become receptive.

Fruit: Berries orange; globose to ellipsoid; 7–22 mm long; crowned by the persistent calyx lobes. Seeds numerous.

Ploidy:

Habitat: Occurring in wet forest; Kohala Mountains; windward Mauna Kea; and windward Mauna Loa; Hawai'i.

Elevation Range: 610–1,520 m.

Historical Distribution

Uses and Culture

USES

Natural History

Statewide Status

Endemic

Island Status

Hawai'i Endemic

Dispersal Agents


Pollinators

Specimens

Bibliography

Name Published In: Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 5: 149 (1861)

Occurrences

SNo. Scientific Name Locality Habitat Basis of Record Description Recorded By Record Number Island Source Date
1 Cyanea pilosa Kulani Project near Kilauea Forest boundary, S Hilo District On mossy log in open canopy Metrosideros forest with understory of native trees, tree ferns, and shrubs. Preserved_Specimen Epiphytic, no flowers present; fruit green and orange, fruit in alcohol accompanies specimen Cuddihy, L.W. 734 Hawaii BISH 1981-02-24
2 Cyanea pilosa Kau District, in Keauhou Ranch, near Kilauea Forest Reserve (TK-H 200') Disturbed Metrosideros - Acacia koa - Cibotium forest in deep shade. Preserved_Specimen Flowers pale greenish white, tinted magenta at base. Fruit green, withi a tint of orange. Height 2 1/2 ft. Davis, J. 229 Hawaii BISH 1980-02-21
3 Cyanea pilosa Mauna Kea Preserved_Specimen Macrae, J. Hawaii BISH 1825-06-01
4 Cyanea pilosa Waiakea Ahupuaa, NE slope of Mauna Loa, along powerline just N of Stainback Highway. Transect 28, Station 117 Wet ohia forest with other native trees and a treefern and native shrub understory. Preserved_Specimen Warshauer, F.R. 1361 Hawaii BISH 1977-08-31
5 Cyanea pilosa South Hilo Distr:; Kulani fern forest, slopes of Mauna Loa growing epiphytically in dense rainforest Preserved_Specimen about 5 feet tall. Note the downward bent peduncles along the stem U.S. Exploring Expedition Hawaii BISH
6 Cyanea pilosa Waiakea Ahupuaa, NE slope of Mauna Loa, along powerline just N of Stainback Highway. Transect 28, Station 117. Wet ohia forest with other native trees and a treefern and native shrub understory. Preserved_Specimen Warshauer, F.R. 1361 Hawaii BISH 1977-08-31