of the beautiful grove on Molokai in the valley of Halawa, which was spoken of 

 and recorded by the earliest navigators who visited these islands. 



Among the plants already mentioned, the following are often met with, 

 though a few are peculiar to certain localities: 



1A species of Tetramolopium* on the more muddy flats 

 on Molokai. 

 (Nehe) Lipochaeta succulenta (Niihau and Kauai)* 

 (Nehe) Lipochaeta integrifolia* 

 (Nehe) Lipochaeta connata var. littoralis* 

 (Kookolau) Campylotheca molokaiensis. 

 (Koko) Euphorbia cordata 



(Ohelo kai) Lycium Sandwicense 



Solanum Nelsoni* (Molokai) 

 Kadua littoralis (Molokai)* 

 Lepidium sp?* 

 (Hoawa) Pittosporum halophilum (Molokai)* 



(EeukiuM) Cassia Gaudichaudii (Lanai BImiele) 



Seaevola coriacea* 

 (Hialoa) Waltheria Americana 



Achyranthus sp. 

 (Makou) Peueedanum Sandwicense* 



Lysimachia spathulata 

 Kuppia maritima 

 (Ninika) Lythrum maritimum (Waikolu, Molokai, only) 



(Mao) Gossypium tomentosum 



(Maiapilo) Capparis Sandwichiana 

 (Anapanapa) Colubrina Asiatica 

 (Kului) Nototrichium humile* 



P>atis maritima 

 (Iliahi aloe) Santalum littorale* 



(Kaunoa) Cassytha filiformis (usually on Ipomoea pes caprae) 

 Of trees the following may be recorded: 

 (Mile) Thespesia populnea 



(Niu) Cocos nucifera 



(Kou) Cordia subcordata 



(Kamani) Terminalia catappa 

 (Noni) Morinda citrifolia 



On the rocks near the sea at Waialua and Cape Kaena, Oahu, the writer ob- 

 served plants of Myoporum Sandwicense* only one foot high, which at 3000 

 feet elevation becomes a tree 40 feet in height. 



* Those which are followed by an asterisk are all peculiar to the Hawaiian Islands 

 and belong to the strand region, with the exception of a few which have descended from 

 the lowlands and are found on the beaches. 



