Return to Coconut Island
ARCS Foundation Honolulu Chapter started with a meeting on Coconut Island, where Barbara Pauley, a charter member of the Los Angeles Founding Chapter. She and her husband enjoyed visiting with Univeristy of Hawai‘i scientists working on the state-owned perimeter while staying at their vacation home on the island's interior. The ARCS Honolulu Chaoter provided $2.5 million for UH graduate students in STEM fields in the 50 years following that 1974 meeting. And Pauley later re-purchased the privately held portion of the island and gifted it to the university for expansion of the Hawai‘i Institute of Marine Biology. Honolulu members returned to the island for a tour and picnic with guests attending the January 2024 National Board Meeting in Honolulu.
First stop: the wet tanks lab of ARCS Scholar Leon Tran
A power outage didn't phase the group, whihe visited Leon's octopi tanks by cell-phone flashlight.
ARCS Scholar Leon Tran with one of his research subjects
Moving on...
Checking out sea creatures at the touch tank
Learning about different kinds of corals and reefs, plus anemones, sea stars, sea cuumbers and more.
Claire Lager explains the work of the Smithsonian coral cryopreservation project.
ARCS Scholar alum Van Wishengrad has returned to the Hawaii‘i Institue of Marine Biology for his second postdoctoral position
Honolulu member Jessica Radovich checks out an aquarium in Van's lab.
A group photo after lunch in the Hawai‘i Institute of Marine Biology picnic area.
Back on O‘ahu, the group braves gusty winds for a visit to the He‘eia National Estuarine Reserch Reserve led by ARCS Scholar alumna Yoshimi Rii, who is the state representative for the project. She explained the Hawaiian land division system that extended from mountain top through valleys and wetlands out into the ocean, creating an interconnected, self-sustaining agricultural system.
Fred Rappun is part of the community non-profit Ka ko‘o O‘iwi, which is restoringing traditional Hawaiian loi (gardens) within the reserve.
Kalo (taro) is a Hawaiian staple—the corm pounded for poi, the leaves stewed in luau or wrapped aorund pork and fish and steamed to make laulau. Ancient chants tell how the plant arose from the burial of the first-born still-born child of Wakea (sky father) and Papa (earth mother), making it the elder brother to the second born Haloa, the ancestor of the Hawaiian people.
The loi is also home to indigenous birds.
Water from the loi flows into the He‘eia fish pond, which is being restored
On to the picnic area for lunch
Scholar Update: Marine Biologist Shayle Matsuda
“The increasing frequency and severity of global coral bleaching events, the devastation to reef ecosystems and the communities who rely on them led to my dedication to coral reef conservation.”
As a University of Hawai‘i at Manoa doctoral candidate, 2019 Honolulu ARCS Scholar Shayle Matsuda pioneered new molecular techniques to study symbioses between coral, algae and bacteria. He continues that work as part of an international coral reef restoration project under a 2021 David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellowship—a premier postdoctoral program in conservation science that supports early-career scientists and seeks solutions to the most pressing conservation challenges.
Scholar Update: Indigenous Scientist Haunani Kane
“Climate issues are large global issues, but the solutions are really going to need to be locally based, driven by communities: community needs, and their vision for the future, as well as looking at our native people and the way that they have sustainably managed lands and their coastal resources,”
2017 Toby Lee ARCS Scholar Dr. Haunani Kane combines indigenous knowledge and modern scientific techniques in her work as Univrsity of Hawai‘i at Manoa assistant professor of earth sciences. Read more
Dr. Mark Hixon on ARCS Scientist Honor
"I am especially grateful that ARCS Honolulu appreciates the mentoring of graduate students, who are society’s future scientists during an era when science is increasingly under attack."
ARCS Honolulu Chapter named marine ecologist Dr. Mark Hixon its 2021 ARCS Scientist of the Year for his remarkable record of research, mentorship and public outreach. He is the Sidney and Erika Hsiao Endowed Chair in Marine Biology and chairs the Zoology Graduate Program at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa. Photo by Chris Pala