There is, of course, the possibility that man has in past times aided in the distribution of Dodonæa viscosa over the warmer regions of the globe. But such an agency seems largely discounted in the case of an isolated archipelago like Hawaii by the occurrence of endemic species. Nor does the usual station in the Pacific islands support the view that it was introduced by the aborigines. According to Hillebrand, it possesses a variety (var. spathulata) in Hawaii which seems also to occur in Tahiti and New Zealand. Nadeaud observes that in Tahiti it grows as a bush on dry crests, and as a small tree, ten feet in height, in the mountains.
Nor do the aboriginal names of Dodonæa viscosa point in the direction of man’s agency. It possesses a different name in every group, and is evidently not a plant with which the ancestors of the Polynesians were familiar in the home of the race. Thus it is named “aalii” in Hawaii, “apiri” in Tahiti, “ake” in Rarotonga, “lala vao” in Samoa, and I may add “usi” or, as Seemann writes it, “wase” in Fiji.
Looking at these various facts, I am not inclined to exclude altogether any one of the three agencies above discussed; but I should imagine that, placed in their order of effectiveness, we should have first birds, then the currents, and lastly man.
Metrosideros (Myrtaceæ)
Whilst this genus of trees and shrubs has its home in New Zealand and Australia, there is an extremely variable Polynesian species, Metrosideros polymorpha, ranging over all the volcanic groups of the tropical Pacific, from Fiji to Pitcairn Island and from Hawaii to the Kermadec group, but seemingly only in the Hawaiian group associated with endemic species. According to the Index Kewensis the genus comprises about forty known species, of which two-thirds are confined to New Zealand and Australia in equal proportions; whilst, among the rest, six species belong to New Caledonia, two to Hawaii, and three to Malaya, and there are solitary species in Chile, Madagascar, and South Africa.
I will attack the problem connected with the distribution of the genus through the widely-ranging Polynesian species, Metrosideros polymorpha. “This genus,” wrote Dr. Seemann, “is in a fair way of becoming in Polynesia what Rubus is in Europe. It is very much given to variation, and it is very difficult to find out the limits of the different species.” In making these remarks he had this species in view, and his adoption of Gaudichaud’s specific name of “polymorpha” to cover almost all the Polynesian forms has been generally followed. Although so widely distributed over the Pacific, it is in the Hawaiian Islands that this tree attains its greatest development, growing gregariously and often forming almost exclusively entire forests; and it is here that it displays the greatest variation. But it was remarked by Seemann, and this was confirmed by Hillebrand, that almost all the Hawaiian forms occur in the Society or Tahitian Islands.
In connection with the great variability of Metrosideros polymorpha must be considered its variety of stations and its great range in altitude. Hillebrand describes seven Hawaiian forms of this species, and their various stations and characters are well illustrated in his descriptions. Thus, whilst the trees may attain a height of forty feet in the forests, in elevated exposed situations they may be small and gnarled or low and shrubby; whilst in the bogs and swamps of the high levels of Maui and Kauai the plant grows as a prostrate shrub. It is not at all unlikely that the two peculiar Hawaiian species of the genus had a common origin from a widely-ranging species, which, if not the present M. polymorpha, was its immediate ancestor. One of them was, indeed, included by Dr. Seemann within the wide limits of this species, and the other was accepted with a doubt.
To illustrate the great vertical range in the Hawaiian Group of Metrosideros polymorpha, I will take it as I found it in the island of Hawaii. Here it ranges from the coast up to about 8,000 feet above the sea. But it is in the middle forest-zone at elevations of 2,000 to 4,000 feet, where it is often associated with the Koa and Olapa Trees (Acacia koa and Cheirodendron Gaudichaudii), that it is most at home and attains its greatest size. Higher up at heights of 5,000 to 7,000 feet in the more open forests it is still in the company of the trees just named together with Sophora chrysophylla and Myoporum sandwicense. At 8,000 feet it becomes very stunted and is accompanied usually by bushes of Cyathodes and other plants of similar bushy growth. In the lower parts of its range, from 2,000 down to 1,000 feet, it forms forests with the Kukui Tree (Aleurites moluccana), mingled also with smaller trees such as the Hawaiian Olive (Osmanthus), and the Kopiko (Straussia). Below 1,000 feet, and wherever bold promontories reach the coast and the inland forest descends to the sea, we find it associated with such trees and shrubs as the Lama (Maba sandwicensis) and different Akeas (Wikstrœmia). On the partially vegetated surfaces of old lava-flows near the coast it grows beside bushes of the Ulei (Osteomeles anthyllidifolia) and of Cyathodes.
Compared with its behaviour in Hawaii, Metrosideros polymorpha takes a relatively unimportant part in the vegetation of Fiji. As Horne observes, the trees are most common in the dry parts of the two largest islands and grow in the poorest soil. I found them in Vanua Levu usually in open exposed situations, generally in the dry “talasinga” plains on the north side of the island, where they were associated with Acacia Richii, Dodonæa viscosa, and Casuarinas; and sometimes they occurred in a shrubby form on the rocky peaks of the highest mountains. In Rarotonga also, as we learn from Cheeseman, it is on the tops of the rocky peaks and along the crests of the ridges that this species, which is abundant in the island, is frequently found.
I may here allude to the curious fact observed by me on the upper open wooded slopes of Mauna Kea at elevations of 6,000 to 7,000 feet, and therefore on the outskirts of the true forest-zone. Here the Ohia Tree, as the Hawaiians name Metrosideros polymorpha, often grows in close association with the Olapa Tree (Cheirodendron Gaudichaudii). In one locality, for instance, a large Olapa was growing in the fork of an Ohia at about eight feet from the ground, and sending down roots on either side. Sometimes the trunks of the Olapa and the Ohia were to be seen growing in such close contact as to look like one tree. In one such case a young tree, four feet high, of Myoporum sandwicense was growing in a fork of the Ohia, whilst in a fork of the Olapa a plant of Vaccinium penduliflorum, three or four feet in height, had established itself. This remarkable instance of epiphytic growth also proved to be quite a revelation with regard to the dispersal of seeds in this island. Amongst these four associated plants, which include three trees and one shrub, all except the Ohia, which was probably the original tree, have fruits that would attract frugivorous birds; and in succession these birds had first dropped a pyrene of the Olapa in the fork of the Ohia, and afterwards the seeds of Myoporum again on the Ohia, whilst finally the Vaccinium seeds were dropped into the fork of the Olapa after it had developed into a tree.