Members of the International Palm Society and Hawaii Island Palm Society are about to embark on an adventure from the Peruvian Amazon to high in the Andes studying the palms of those regions. This is part of a program to educate, protect and promote the use of palms in the tropics, subtropics and warm temperate regions.
In February 2026, the IPS is also having a major conference for members in Vietnam and Thailand. If you wish to join the HIPS or IPS to get involved in some of their activities, visit HawaiiIslandPalmSociety.com.
There are some upcoming tours of private gardens you may like to see, and it is a great opportunity to get acquainted with palm enthusiasts. Some private gardens in West Hawaii include that of Dean Ouer in Kaloko mauka, Kona Cloud Forest Sanctuary at 3,000 feet elevation, and Donald Sanders’ private garden at 1,500 feet elevation in Holualoa, just to mention a few.
When we think of the tropics, the first trees that come to mind are coconut palms gracing white coral sand beaches. Truly, these palms have been carried by humans throughout the tropical world over thousands of years. Taxonomists, botanists and anthropologists have attempted to discover the origin of this valuable tree, but none are sure. At any rate, the coconut palm is one of our favorite trees in Hawaii for landscape purposes, food and shelter.
However, there are many more palms species to be found here. They generally come in two types. These are the feather leaf or pinnate and the fan leaf or palmate. Of course, there are always exceptions like the fishtail palms or caryota species with bipinnate leaves. According to Jeff Marcus, we may have up to 800 species found here. At his floribunda palms nursery, they have around 300 rare species available. You may contact him at floribundapalms.com.
When it comes to species of palms in the world, there are thousands with more discovered each year. They come from the high mountains like the Andean wax palms that live at 13,000 feet above sea level, to equatorial rainforest species like those from the Amazon.
Desert palms are another large group, but none is quite so close to our Hawaiian hearts as the coconut palm. The coconut palm group is composed of scores of varieties including some dwarf types that should be used more in Hawaii. Not only are they shorter and easy to harvest, they are resistant to a devastating disease referred to as lethal yellowing. Unfortunately, our endemic loulu palms (Pritchardia species) are very prone to this disease. We do not want to accidentally introduce this disease.
In the past, palms here have few serious insect pests or diseases but now we are losing thousands of palms on Oahu due to the coconut rhinoceros beetle. The insect is unusual and attractive. This makes them tempting to some insect collectors. These beetles will kill many other palm species as well. Ironically, these and other damaging species may be purchased online and easily be smuggled to Hawaii by careless characters. The red palm weevil is another that poses a threat. It has been found in Florida and California.
Hawaii’s palms may be affected by bud rot or stem bleeding disease that is often caused by physical damage such as unsanitary pruning equipment or climbing spikes. Most palms showing yellow or stunted growth have been found to be suffering from lack of fertilizer or water. The trees simply need a balanced fertilizer plus minor elements, applied three to four times per year, and regular irrigation.
All these problems are correctable, but if lethal yellowing and palm-damaging insects ever gets in Hawaii, there’s no practical way of stopping destruction of our island’s palms. Not only would the coconut palm be destroyed, but hundreds of species of native and exotic palms would also die.
When lethal yellowing hit the mainland of Florida, it was discovered that many other palms species were also susceptible to the disease in varying degrees. Florida embarked on a two-stage program to replant the stripped areas. Over half a million dwarf coconuts were imported. The dwarf, while highly resistant to the disease, also had the added benefit of easily harvested nuts and did not require expensive nut and leaf removal as with the tall varieties.
Hawaii is fortunate tobe far from many disease and insect affected regions, so it is vital that we do not introduce these and other plant plagues. We can also make every effort to use many of the hundreds of disease-resistant species besides the coconut palm to grace our home landscapes, parks and scenic roadways. We are fortunate to have several nurseries like Suchin and Jeff Marcus’s Floribunda that have collected palms seed from all over the world for our parks and gardens.
It is important to cooperate with the state and federal Departments of Agriculture and follow all the rules of inspection to keep our palms free of disease and insect pests. Don’t forget, there are major fines and prison for folks who try to smuggle plants, insects or animals to Hawaii!
Norman Bezona is professor emeritus, University of Hawaii College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources.
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