
Photos by Mark Leichty
This exceedingly rare plant, Argyroxiphium sandwicense subsp. macrocephalum is only found on this mountain in Maui. A relative, the Mauna Kea Silversword is found only on the Big Island. At first glance, it definitely looked like a succulent, and I mistook it for a Yucca of some sort. The plants have swordlike leaves which form a rosette and are covered with silvery hairs. The climate on Haleakala is very dry, and the hairs help the plants get water. We stayed for sunset and the temperature dropped to near freezing. Snow is not uncommon on the peak.

Individual plants can live for 50 years before they initiate a flower cycle. The flower head rises two meters up out of the rosette and contains up to six hundred flower heads that are pollinated by a small bee, Hylaeus volcanicus. We saw mature plants in flower near the summit. The population has declined from around 50,000 individuals to less than 35,000 over the last decade. Haleakala Silversword, or ‘ahinahina’ in Hawaiian, has been listed as a threatened species since 1992. The National Park Service controls the number of people that can visit this fragile ecosystem each day. Climate change is also having an impact on the survival of this incredible plant species.


Explore the April 2024 Issue
Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.
Latest from Nursery Management
- The HC Companies, Classic Home & Garden merge as Growscape
- Eason Horticultural Resources will now officially be known as EHR
- BioWorks receives EPA approval for new biological insecticide for thrips, aphids, whiteflies
- Ellen Mackenbach-Lakeman appointed new CEO of Dümmen Orange
- Southern Garden Tour sets 2025 dates for trial garden open houses
- New book explores plants that thrive in Rocky Mountains
- American Floral Endowment establishes Herman Meinders Memorial Tribute
- These companies are utilizing plastic alternatives to reduce horticultural waste