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Hawaii Volcanoes National Park - Nature and Science![]() Well-known for its volcanic significance, Hawai"i Volcanoes National Park is also one of the most fascinating biologic landscapes in the world. Located over 2000 miles from the nearest continent, the Hawaiian Archipelago is the most geographically isolated group of islands on Earth. The Park sits on the southeastern edge of the youngest and largest island of Hawai"i at a latitude of 19°N. 1. Remove alien invasive species with primary focus on highly disruptive weeds and introduced ungulates such as sheep, goats, and pigs. 2. Restore highly altered Park ecosystems to conditions as natural as practical through extensive plantings of seedlings. 3. Restore lost biodiversity in Park ecosystems by recovering endangered, threatened, and rare species and reintroducing locally extirpated species. 4. Develop a systematic, science-based program of inventory and monitoring to better understand ecosystem populations, communities, threats, stresses, and health. 5. Maintain and expand Park partnerships with neighbors for natural and cultural resource protection to target invasive species threatening parklands. 6. Focus on recovery for four endangered species; the nene, Hawaiian petrel, hawksbill turtle and Mauna Loa silversword as flagship programs for the Park with continued monitoring of all rare and threatened plant and animal species. Environmental Factors Natural Features Fire Regime |
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Hawaii Volcanoes National Park - Nature and Science
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