TY - JOUR T1 - Silversword and lobeliad reintroduction linked to landscape restoration on Mauna Loa and Kīlauea, and its implications for plant adaptive radiation in Hawaiʻi JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/095216 SP - 095216 AU - Robert H. Robichaux AU - Patrice Y. Moriyasu AU - Jaime H. Enoka AU - Sierra McDaniel AU - Rhonda K. Loh AU - Kealiʻi F. Bio AU - Ane Bakutis AU - J. Timothy Tunison AU - Steven T. Bergfeld AU - J. Lyman Perry AU - Frederick R. Warshauer AU - Mark Wasser AU - T. Colleen Cole AU - Nicholas R. Agorastos AU - Ian W. Cole AU - J. Kualiʻi Camara AU - Tanya Rubenstein AU - A. Nāmaka Whitehead AU - Joshua R. VanDeMark AU - Reid Loo AU - Marie M. Bruegmann Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/19/095216.abstract N2 - The endemic Hawaiian silversword and lobeliad lineages, which are two of the world’s premier examples of plant adaptive radiation, exemplify the severity of the threats confronting the Hawaiian flora, especially the threats posed by alien species. We have implemented collaborative reintroduction efforts with the endangered Kaʻū silversword (Argyroxiphium kauense) and Pele lobeliad (Clermontiapeleana) in Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. The efforts with the Kaʻū silversword have involved rediscovery, helicopter assisted rescue of diminutive remnant founders, managed breeding, outplanting at two sites in the Park of more than 21,000 seedlings deriving from 169 founders, and facilitated achene dispersal following flowering. The efforts with the Pele lobeliad have involved rediscovery, air-layering of remnant founders while suspended on climbing ropes, managed breeding, and outplanting at two sites in the Park of more than 1,000 seedlings (to date) deriving from six of the seven known founders. We have linked the reintroduction efforts to landscape restoration at large scales in the Park and in adjacent State and private lands, thereby increasing the opportunities for substantial population growth and expansion of the Kaʻū silversword and Pele lobeliad in the future. Additionally, we have extended the reintroduction efforts, including the link to landscape restoration, to encompass all other endangered silversword and lobeliad taxa occurring historically on the eastern slopes of Mauna Loa or on Kīlauea. In so doing, we seek to restore the possibility of adaptive radiation of the silversword and lobeliad lineages going forward, especially on the youngest and most geologically active, and thus perhaps most evolutionarily dynamic, part of the Hawaiian archipelago.Dedication This paper celebrates the centennial of Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, which was founded in August 1916. ER -