North America Native Plant

Lau Lihilihi

Botanical name: Schiedea stellarioides

USDA symbol: SCST3

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: subshrub

Native status: Native to Hawaii  

Synonyms: Schiedea stellarioides H. Mann var. brevifolia Sherff (SCSTB)  âš˜  Schiedea stellarioides H. Mann var. hillebrandii Hochr. (SCSTH)  âš˜  Schiedea stellarioides H. Mann var. implexoides Sherff (SCSTI)  âš˜  Schiedea stellarioides H. Mann var. longifolia Sherff (SCSTL)   

Lau Lihilihi: Hawaii’s Critically Endangered Native Gem Meet lau lihilihi (Schiedea stellarioides), one of Hawaii’s most precious and precarious native plants. This delicate Hawaiian shrub might not be heading to your garden anytime soon, but its story is absolutely worth knowing – especially if you’re passionate about native plant conservation. ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: United States

Status: S1: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: Critically Imperiled: Extremely rare due to factor(s) making it especially vulnerable to extinction. Typically 5 or fewer occurrences or very few remaining individuals (<1,000) ⚘ Endangered: In danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range. ⚘

Region: United States

Lau Lihilihi: Hawaii’s Critically Endangered Native Gem

Meet lau lihilihi (Schiedea stellarioides), one of Hawaii’s most precious and precarious native plants. This delicate Hawaiian shrub might not be heading to your garden anytime soon, but its story is absolutely worth knowing – especially if you’re passionate about native plant conservation.

What Makes Lau Lihilihi Special?

Lau lihilihi is a perennial shrub that’s as rare as it is beautiful. With its small, star-shaped white flowers and narrow leaves, this plant embodies the delicate beauty of Hawaii’s native flora. As a multi-stemmed woody plant, it typically stays under 13-16 feet tall, creating an elegant presence in its natural habitat.

Where Does It Call Home?

This botanical treasure is endemic to Hawaii, meaning it exists nowhere else on Earth. You’ll find it growing naturally only in the Hawaiian Islands, where it has adapted to the unique conditions of its island home over thousands of years.

The Reality Check: Why You Can’t (and Shouldn’t) Just Plant This

Here’s where things get serious, fellow plant lovers. Lau lihilihi carries some hefty conservation credentials that make it completely off-limits for casual gardening:

  • Global Conservation Status: S1 (Critically Imperiled)
  • Federal Status: Endangered
  • Population: Typically 5 or fewer occurrences with less than 1,000 remaining individuals

This means lau lihilihi is dancing on the edge of extinction. Every single plant matters for the species’ survival.

If You’re Determined to Help This Species

While you can’t casually add lau lihilihi to your backyard, you can still make a difference:

  • Support conservation efforts: Donate to Hawaiian native plant conservation organizations
  • Choose responsibly: If you somehow encounter this plant through legitimate botanical sources (which is extremely unlikely), ensure it comes with proper permits and documentation
  • Spread awareness: Share the story of Hawaii’s endangered plants with fellow gardeners

Growing Conditions (For Educational Purposes)

Should this plant ever become available through conservation programs, here’s what it would need:

  • Climate: USDA zones 10-12 only (tropical to subtropical)
  • Light: Partial shade to full sun
  • Soil: Well-draining soil that mimics its native Hawaiian habitat
  • Care level: Expert-level specialized care required

Better Alternatives for Your Native Hawaiian Garden

If you’re inspired by lau lihilihi but want to create a native Hawaiian garden, consider these more readily available (and less critically endangered) options:

  • Other Schiedea species that aren’t endangered
  • Native Hawaiian shrubs from reputable native plant nurseries
  • Plants that support the same pollinators and ecosystem functions

The Bottom Line

Lau lihilihi represents both the incredible beauty and heartbreaking fragility of Hawaii’s native ecosystems. While most of us will never grow this plant, we can all play a role in protecting it by supporting conservation efforts and choosing readily available native alternatives for our own gardens.

Sometimes the most powerful thing we can do for a plant is simply leave it alone – and make sure future generations have the chance to marvel at its delicate star-shaped flowers in the wild where they belong.

Lau Lihilihi

Classification

Group

Dicot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons

Subclass

Caryophyllidae

Order

Caryophyllales

Family

Caryophyllaceae Juss. - Pink family

Genus

Schiedea Cham. & Schltdl. - schiedea

Species

Schiedea stellarioides H. Mann - lau lihilihi

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA