Prosecutors eye charges over taking of rare Hawaii plants

A rare silversword plant that had been removed by a visitor from Haleakala summit in Haleakala National Park in Hawaii. (National Park Service via AP)
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HALEAKALA NATIONAL PARK, Maui (AP) — U.S. prosecutors are considering charges against two people seen taking rare, federally protected silversword plants found only on a mountain on Maui, authorities said.

A visitor to Haleakala National Park reported seeing a woman taking two Haleakala silversword plants from the ground Monday and leaving in a vehicle, the National Park Service said in a news release.

The plants are found only on the slopes of Maui’s Haleakala at altitudes above 6,900 feet. The plant is listed as threatened, and removing or damaging it is a federal crime. The witness took a photo of the car and alerted park law enforcement officers. The woman and driver were apprehended with the plants in Paia, a town about 24 miles from the park. They were released pending further investigation, park Chief Ranger Ari Wong said.

“These plants are already so rare, picking them is illegal for a very good reason,” he said.

Biologists will try to replant the recovered silverswords. Wong said there are about 40,000 of the plants on the mountain.

With its fleshy leaves, the silversword can live from three to more than 90 years. It flowers once, sending up a long stalk, and then dies.