Hawaii
On either end of the state, opposition is voiced against planned residential developments
HILO and POIPU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Two residential developments are drawing opposition from neighboring residents and Native Hawaiians who are voicing concerns over damage to cultural sites and overdevelopment in rural areas.
The developments are located in Punaluu in the Ka’u District on Hawaii Island, and in Poipu on Kauai.
At a public input meeting in Hilo Thursday, so many people came out against the Punaluu project that the session had to be rescheduled to allow more testimony.
Those who did testify were overwhelmingly against the project.
“My kupuna has cried because malihini keeps coming and taking,” said one man dressed in a malo. “We never give ‘em to you you guys, we never!”
Commission members were taking testimony before taking action on developer Black Sand Beach LLC’s permit request. It wants to build 225 residential and short-stay units, rehabilitate an old golf course from a previous resort, and also dedicated part of the nearby coastline as a conservation area.
Ka’u residents had already spent last weekend protesting against it.
“They’re gonna constantly take. They’re gonna give us crumbs, tell us you can go clean our condos, you can go work in our hotels and you can go mow our lawns for your golf course, and then next thing you know, they gonna build houses,” another testifier told the commission. “Ka’u is a farmer community and a ranching community. It’ll kill Ka’u.”
Native Hawaiians are also concerned that cultural sites will be damaged or destroyed.
“It is home to our kupuna burial grounds and cultural artifacts that must be protected and respected,” said another testifier. “Any development in this area would not only desecrate the sacred sites, but also disregard the cultural heritage of our people.”
“We’ve seen how this type of thing plays out,” said Wilhoite, testifying via Zoom. “It’s not to the benefit of the community. It’s to the benefit of the outside entities.”
Meanwhile, over 300 miles away across the island chain, residents are fighting to save a cultural site in Poipu known as Kaneiolouma.
“I live there all my life, and I see how there’s a lot of energy in there,” said Billy Kaohelaulii, a steward of Kaneiolouma. “It’s a quiet, holy place, you know.”
Kaohelaulii helped uncover and clear the site which includes a heiau, along with evidence of housing and a large structure in the center that is the only remaining ancient makahiki area in the state.
But the group Friends of Mahaulepu said that developer Meridian Pacific plans to build 279 luxury condo homes next to the site, and use the heiau land as a natural water retention basin.
“They’re actually offering it up to hold their excess water when they cover their 28 acres in concrete, and that’s pretty bizarre if you’re trying to protect the place,” said group president Bridget Hammerquist.
Hammerquist also said Kauai County had offered assistance in keeping the land cleared, but no longer does so, which has allowed it to become overgrown once again.
“And it’s said because it’s one of the few heiaus that is with the housing, the hale, with the fishpond. It’s all one site,” she said.
Friends of Mahaulepu has filed for a preliminary injunction against the county and the developer to stop the project. A similar vow is being made against the Punaluu development.
“We need to keep Ka’u, Ka’u, to keep this area of the coastline undeveloped and no matter what, people will be here to fight for it,” another testifier told the planning commission. “Even if you do approve it, we won’t let it happen.”
Calls to Black Sand Beach LLC were not returned. HNN is also awaiting a response from Meridian Pacific.
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
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Hawaii
First documented tiger shark mating hub identified by UH researchers
OLOWALU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A team of shark researchers from the University of Hawaii at Manoa have solved a longstanding mystery.
Biologists from the the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology Shark Lab have identified the first-ever documented tiger shark mating hub.
Six years of acoustic tracking data led the team to pinpoint the area at Olowalu, Maui, leading them to new discoveries about the nature and timing of tiger shark mating and its correlation to Maui’s whale calving season.
This new finding challenges the understanding of tiger sharks as purely solitary animals.
“To our knowledge, no group mating site for tiger sharks has ever been identified. This paper adds an important piece to the puzzle of tiger shark reproduction,” said Carl Meyer, co-author of the study and principal investigator of the HIMB Shark Lab.
Researchers were able to show evidence that tiger sharks have a predictable seasonal gathering of mature males and females that coincides with humpback whale calving season in Hawaii.
Until this discovery, it was unclear how or if tiger sharks came together to reproduce or if mating was just a result of random encounters.
“Tiger sharks typically roam widely in what can seem like random patterns, so finding such a strong and consistent seasonal trend in their movements around Maui was unexpected,” said Paige Wernli, lead author of the study and a graduate student in the HIMB Shark Lab.
The years-long tracking data showed a predictable seasonal presence of both mature male and female tiger sharks at Olowalu, as well as physical evidence of mating activity.
The apparent mating hub happens during the time of year when humpback whale mothers and newborn calves arrive in the area.
The Shark Lab team says the correlation could mean that the sharks are positioning themselves near foraging opportunities, like vulnerable calves or placental falls.
“Mating and foraging on humpback whales may not be mutually exclusive,” Wernli said. “And both could influence tiger shark movement patterns in Hawaii.”
The tiger shark gatherings they observed were not dense but rather diffuse, spanning several kilometers over multiple months.
“This study expands our knowledge of tiger shark mating and challenges our conventional understanding of the term ‘gathering,’” said Meyer. “Together, the results suggest that both reproduction and food availability play key roles in shaping tiger shark movements in Hawaii.”
During the six-year study, the team was able to safely catch and implant transmitters in large sharks, then keep a vast network of underwater listening stations across the main Hawaiian Islands.
In the future, the Shark Lab team plans to use tags with cameras and other data collecting capabilities to document both their mating behaviors and shark-whale interactions.
This work was funded by the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources and the Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
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