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KOA (short for Kampgrounds of America) is an American franchise of privately owned campgrounds. Having more than 500 locations across the United States and Canada, it is the world's largest system of privately owned campgrounds.
Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport at Keāhole (IATA: KOA, ICAO: PHKO, FAA LID: KOA) is the primary airport on the Island of Hawaiʻi, located in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, United States. [3] The airport serves leeward (western) Hawaiʻi island , including the resorts in North Kona and South Kohala .
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KOA Corporation (Japanese: コーア株式会社, Kōa kabushiki kaisha; TYO: 6999) is a multinational passive electronic components supplier based in Japan. The company was founded on March 10, 1940 and registered to become a public corporation on May 24, 1947. [ 1 ]
Koa is a species of tree endemic to Hawaii. Koa or KOA may also refer to: Guwa language, or Koa, an Australian language; Kampgrounds of America, a franchise chain of North American campgrounds; KCNC-TV, an American television station, which used the callsign KOA-TV from December 24, 1953 until August 1983; KOA (AM), an American radio station
Some common names for it are ayangile, small Philippine acacia, Formosa acacia (Taiwan acacia), Philippine Wattle, and Formosan koa. It grows to a height of 15 m. It grows to a height of 15 m. The tree has become very common in many tropical Pacific areas, including Hawaii, where the species is considered invasive.
Scotorythra paludicola, the koa looper moth, is a moth of the family Geometridae. It was first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1879. It is endemic to the Hawaiian islands of Kauai , Oahu , Maui and Hawaii .
Acacia koa, commonly known as koa, [3] is a species of flowering tree in the family Fabaceae. It is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands , [ 2 ] where it is the second most common tree. [ 4 ] The highest populations are on Hawaiʻi , Maui and Oʻahu .