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Home Publications National Nursery Proceedings 1996 Impacts of Hurricane Iniki on Koa Forests

Impacts of Hurricane Iniki on Koa Forests

On 11 September 1992, Hurricane Iniki struck koa forests we had studied along an elevation gradient (500 to 1300 m) on western Kaua'i. The hurricane decreased canopy leaf area by 29 to 80 percent, and damage was proportional to pre-hurricane leaf area and canopy height. At some sites, phyllodes were stripped from intact branches, leaving the canopy otherwise intact. At other sites, many large branches and a few entire trees were broken off, thereby removing most of the overstory canopy. The canopy damage resulted in a large pulse of litter, ranging from 4 to 19 t ha' across our study sites. In the first six months following the hurricane, tree growth rates decreased in proportion to leaf area lost. Thereafter, growth rates increased, generally following the pattern of leaf area recovery.


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Author(s): Robin A. Harrington

Event: Koa: A Decade of Growth
1996 - Honolulu Hawai’i