Skip to main content
PlantsInUSA
perennial

Kokia cookei O. Deg.

Kokia cookei O. Deg.

Kokia cookei
Photo: David Eickhoff from Pearl City, Hawaii, USA · CC BY 2.0

Kokia cookei O. Deg.. Kokia cookei is a small, deciduous tree commonly known as the kokiʻo, Molokaʻi treecotton, Cooke's kokiʻo, or Molokaʻi kokiʻo. It is about 3 m (9.8 ft) in height, with simple leaves of 5 to 7 lobes, and large flowers. The fruit that the plant produces is composed of a five-lobed capsule that is dry and covered with short, dense hairs. The Kokia follows the typical flowering plant life cycle. It was distributed in the lowlands of the Hawaiian islands prior to going extinct in the wild in 1978. It survives only as grafted branches on other Kokia species trees. Conservation efforts, such as cultivation, are in place to attempt to nurse the species back to health. It is suspected that the species played a major role in the ecosystem through pollination but it is not confirmed.

Advertisement728 × 90 — space reserved
MORE ON AMAZON #ad · As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases

Kokia cookei O. Deg. — seeds, tools & books

Native range

Native range not recorded for this plant. Often a non-native cultivar or naturalized garden plant.

Sources