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Cibotium chamissoi

Image of Hapu'u

Description:

Hpuu or Hpuu meuCibotiaceaeEndemic to the Hawaiian IslandsAiea Ridge Trail, OahuUnderside of frond showing the sori (fern spore).Hawaiians, both long ago as well as in recent times, ate the uncoiled fronds (fiddles), which were considered delicious when boiled. Likely the starchy core of this species, as with hpuu pulu and hpuu ii, was used as an important famine food. One trunk may contain 50-70 pounds of almost pure starch and would have been used for human as well as pig consumption. It was prepared by peeling the young fronds or placing the entire trunk with the starchy center in an imu or in steam vents at the volcano.EtymologyThe generic name Cibotium is from the Greek kibotion, diminutive of kibotos, a box or casket, in reference to the indusium, a part of the fern blade that covers the sorus (spores).The specific name, chamissoi, named for Ludolf Karl Adelbert von Chamisso (1781-1838), French-born German explorer, naturalist, author, poet, and plant collector.www.nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Cibotium_chamissoi

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David Eickhoff
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