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The Flag of Hawaii [1] Seal: The Great Seal of the State of Hawaii [2] Motto "Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono" ("The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness") — [3] Popular name "The Aloha State" — [4]
Thrum possibly ignored or misplaced the ʻokina because the Hawaiian phrase "ʻo ahu" could be translated as "gathering of objects" (ʻo is a subject marker and ahu means "to gather"). The term Oʻahu has no other confirmed meaning in Hawaiian. [6]
Fauna of Hawaii — animals native to or naturalized in the Hawaiian Islands, part of the Oceania ecozone fauna. Subcategories This category has the following 9 subcategories, out of 9 total.
The male Hawaiian duck has an average length of 48–50 cm (19–19.5 in) and the female has an average length of 40–43 cm (15.5–17 in). [10] On average, the male weighs 604 grams (21.3 ounces) and the female weighs 460 grams (16 ounces). [11]
The pueo is recognized as an endemic subspecies of short-eared owl by the state of Hawai’i; [4] on the island of O’ahu, the state currently lists it as an endangered species. [5] Nevertheless, the pueo’s presence in Hawai’i is the result of prehistoric human activities, not solely natural evolution or avian migration , thus blurring the ...
Red-vented bulbul (O'ahu) Red-whiskered bulbul (O'ahu) Japanese bush warbler (All main islands) White-rumped shama (All main islands) Greater necklaced laughingthrush (Kauai) Chinese Hwamei (All main islands) Red-billed leiothrix (Hawaii, Maui, O'ahu) Warbling white-eye (Hawaii, Maui, Kauai, see Japanese white-eye in Hawaii) Northern ...
Ahupuaʻa is derived from Hawaiian language ahu, meaning “heap” or “cairn,” and puaʻa, pig. The boundary markers for ahupuaʻa were traditionally heaps of stones used to put offers, often a pig, to the island chief. Each ahupuaʻa was divided into smaller sections called ʻili, and the ʻili were divided into kuleana.
John Gould scientifically named and described the O‘ahu ‘ō‘ō in 1860, [4] when it was already regarded as extinct for 23 years. The last reliable evidence was a collection of about three birds by German naturalist Ferdinand Deppe in 1837, finding those specimens in the hills behind the capital, Honolulu .