E HO'OMAU
Hawai'i Natural Area Reserves
System

PERPETUATE Hawai'i
NARS
Legacy Lands Act meets habitat needs for people and wildlife (57k PDF)
Summary of the Draft 2005 Kökua Bill – December 29, 2004 (172K PDF)
KAHEA: The Hawaiian Environmental Alliance is committed
to protecting Hawai'i's Natural Area Reserves System (NARS).
The NARS was established by the late Governor John Burns and
the state legislature in 1970. The Department of Land and Natural
Resources Division of Forestry and Wildlife currently oversees
19 Natural Area Reserves in the
system, totaling 109,164 acres of state-managed land. To
date, there are reserves on the islands of Kaua'i, O'ahu, Moloka'i,
Maui and Hawai'i.
Nearly all the reserves face numerous threats.
Only one-fourth of the entire system is actively managed and protected
at this time. State funding
for the NARS has dwindled over the years. Only $11 per acre
per year is spent to protect some of the best remaining
native ecosystems on state-managed land. The equivalent of one
staff person for every 5,745 acres of reserve is currently assigned
to manage the NARS on the ground.
The NARS provides essential habitat for native
plants and animals and refuge for some of our most
endangered species. Most of the reserves are watersheds that support
the people, the economy and the Native
Hawaiian culture. All but two of the reserves are ceded
land, held in trust for the people of Hawai`i.
Coral reefs, anchialine pools, sand dunes, sea cliffs, waterfalls,
streams, lava tube caves, aeolian deserts, grasslands, rain forests,
dry forests, bogs, snowy alpine terrain, montane lakes, kipuka
and dozens of other unique Hawaiian
ecosystems are protected in the NARS.
The importance of the NARS is evident in the living Native Hawaiian
culture and in the many ways all of Hawai'i's people depend on
and enjoy the environment. If we lose Hawaiian plants and animals,
we lose a very special part of our world. Not only is the beauty
of Hawai'i is diminished, the traditions that are based
on these species will also be lost. From mauka to makai, the NARS
protects some of the most biologically rich areas remaining in
Hawai'i.
KAHEA is partnering with the other organizations, local communities
and Native Hawaiian practitioners to raise public awareness and
support, and help secure permanent adequate funding for this extraordinary
program.
IMPORTANT FACTS