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Maui’s neglected (Invasive) grasslands caused Lahaina fire to grow with deadly speed
(www.washingtonpost.com)
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Invasive pasture grasses aren't really lawns but I'm loving the grass-hate. It's a plant that has evolved to kill trees (and unfortunately people) and then recover quickly to do it again.
Anybody here know what the pre-clearing state of the area may have been? Rainforest, dry rainforest, native grasslands etc? It's hard to look it up, not sure if you have mapping layers that show it.
As I understand it, the issue is that huge sugar cane plantations have just been left empty.
Sugar cane used to be native, then it was used for plantations, then it was removed, then invasive plants took over the empty space more quickly than any native plants.
Yeah, we have the same systems in place here in subtropical Aus; same species, same degraded and cleared ecosystems. Even looks slightly similar.
When I think Hawaii I imagine tropical ecosystems but I understand some islands are naturally drier. What was there prior to the degradation is of interest and as I work in regeneration/reclamation, of interest again as to how these systems can be recreated.
There’s bound to be a study on this topic.
I've tried searching and I suppose the fact that it's recent news pushes all the sources to the new.
In Australia, we can apply a "pre-clearing" layer to most of our mapping that let's you know what the ecosystem was there before it was cleared. Does the US have something like that? I'm not sure where to get started.
Where I am, the same invasive grass species exist and things look similar. Be interesting to know if it was tropical forest prior.
I don’t know but try searching for it on Google Scholar
https://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/mauisoil/b_oxisol.aspx
Not much that is a precise take on what was behind Lahaina but I found the above that shows it might be a weathered system of lower hardy natives, including cactus (Cactus, kiawe, lantana, and koa haole.) 2 of those are weeds of here - Lantana and Leucaena.
Low point of rain is 20 inches, 500mm, about half of what we get. 32 on the high end which is our low end.
Here are some nearby sections:
https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/ecosystems/nars/maui/west-maui-2/
https://www.maunakahalawai.org/mauna-kahalawai-west-maui-mountains
https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/ecosystems/files/2013/07/West-Maui-Fact-Sheets-and-Topographical-Maps.pdf - East of Lahaina is the Panaewa Section
I've read several recent news articles describing the negative affects of colonialism and the pineapple trade.
If I remember correctly this had the deepest dive: https://civileats.com/2023/08/23/how-two-centuries-of-extractive-agriculture-helped-set-the-stage-for-the-maui-fires/
That's a good one. Hints at written/verbal records.
Thank you very much for that.