Native Forest Restoration · Agroforestry · Carbon Sequestration · Watershed Protection

Reforestation & Agroforestry

Hawaiʻi has lost over 60% of its native forest cover since Western contact. Zeph 808's reforestation strategy integrates the Honokohau Valley 1,000-Acre Sustainable Development Project with our aquaponic seed nursery, partner network, and the ahupuaʻa model — restoring native ecosystems from mountain to sea while building food sovereignty.

Why Reforestation · The Hawaiian Forest Crisis

A Forest in Crisis

What Was Lost

Before human contact, Hawaiʻi was covered by dense native forests from mountain summits to the coast. Centuries of clearing for sugarcane, pineapple, and ranching destroyed over 60% of native forest cover.

The World Wildlife Fund named Hawaiʻi the "endangered species capital of the world" — home to at least a third of all America's endangered species. The loss of koa and ʻōhiʻa forests is the primary driver.

Without forest cover, watersheds degrade, soil erodes, coral reefs suffer from sediment runoff, and carbon sequestration capacity plummets. The entire ahupuaʻa system — mountain to sea — breaks down.

How Zeph 808 Helps

Zeph 808's approach is hybrid reforestation + productive agroforestry — not just planting trees, but creating multi-canopy food forests that restore ecosystems while feeding communities.

Our aquaponic greenhouses serve as native plant nurseries, growing koa, ʻōhiʻa, sandalwood, and other species from seed in controlled environments before outplanting. The nutrient-rich aquaponic water accelerates seedling growth.

The Honokohau Valley project — a partnership with Maui Eco Built, Uncle Kimokeo, and APU Consulting — targets 1,000 acres of agroforestry restoration over 10 years, with 100 loʻi kalo patches and integrated aquaculture.

Hybrid ReforestationMulti-CanopyAquaponic Nursery1,000 Acres
Native · Canoe Plants · Agroforestry Food Crops

Species Catalog

Three tiers of species form the Zeph 808 reforestation strategy — endemic natives for ecosystem restoration, Polynesian canoe plants for cultural reconnection, and productive food trees for community sustenance. All species sourced from the Honokohau Valley project plan and Zeph 808 Seed Bank Network.

🌳
Koa
Acacia koa
King of Hawaiian trees. Timber, habitat, carbon sequestration. Up to 60 tonnes CO₂/hectare. High-elevation restoration.
🌺
ʻŌhiʻa Lehua
Metrosideros polymorpha
Keystone species. First to colonize lava flows. Critical bird habitat. Threatened by Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death.
🪵
ʻIliahi (Sandalwood)
Santalum paniculatum
Hawaiian sandalwood. Essential oil production. High-value timber. Endemic to Hawaiʻi. ISO-standard santalol content.
🌿
Naio
Myoporum sandwicense
False sandalwood. Dryland forest restoration. Erosion control on dry slopes. Wind-resistant.
🍃
ʻAʻaliʻi
Dodonaea viscosa
Pioneer shrub. Dryland and coastal restoration. Fire-resistant. Wind-tolerant. Fast-growing understory.
🌴
Loulu Palm
Pritchardia spp.
Endemic palm genus. 24+ species. Lowland-to-montane restoration. Cultural significance. Critically endangered.
🌸
Wiliwili
Erythrina sandwicensis
Dryland forest canopy. Lightweight wood. Cultural use. Threatened by gall wasp. Dry forest indicator species.
🌱
Māmane
Sophora chrysophylla
High-elevation native tree. Critical habitat for palila bird. Nitrogen-fixing. Subalpine restoration.
🌾
Kalo
Taro
Colocasia esculenta
Elder brother of humanity. Loʻi terraces. Poi production. 10,000 lbs/yr per 10 patches. Cultural keystone.
🥖
ʻUlu
Breadfruit
Artocarpus altilis
Staple food tree. 500 trees → 15,000 lbs/yr. Drought-resistant. Carbon sequestration. Canopy shade for understory.
🥥
Niu
Coconut
Cocos nucifera
300 trees → 9,000 lbs/yr. Food, oil, fiber, building material. Coastal restoration. Fast-growing canopy.
🍠
ʻUala
Sweet Potato
Ipomoea batatas
Rotational ground cover. 30,000 lbs/yr at scale. Okinawan purple variety premium. Erosion control.
🌿
ʻŌlena
Turmeric
Curcuma longa
Medicinal. Loʻi margins. Anti-inflammatory. Value-added dried product $20–$40/lb. Shade-tolerant understory.
🌺
ʻAwapuhi
Ginger
Zingiber zerumbet
Shampoo ginger for hair care. Culinary ginger for cooking. Shade-tolerant. $5–$12/lb fresh.
🥭
Mango
Mangifera indica
300 trees → 12,000 lbs/yr. Shade for understory. Early fruit production. Multi-canopy upper story.
🥑
Avocado
Persea americana
200 trees → 10,000 lbs/yr. High market value. Shade provision. Year-round production in Hawaiʻi.
🍌
Banana
Musa spp.
Multi-canopy mid-layer. Rapid growth. Continuous harvest. Wind protection for understory. Cultural staple.
🫐
Lilikoi
Passionfruit
Passiflora edulis
Trellis system. 8,000 lbs/yr. Grown between tree rows. Pollinator attractor. Value-added juice products.
Coffee
Coffea arabica
20 acres → 20,000 lbs/yr. Shade-grown under canopy trees. Hawaiʻi premium pricing. Export potential.
🍈
Papaya
Carica papaya
400 trees → 10,000 lbs/yr. Quick-growing. Short lifecycle. Ideal for early agroforestry phases.
🫖
Kava
Piper methysticum
Medicinal/ceremonial. 5,000 lbs/yr. Grown in shaded areas. Local market + export. Cultural significance.
🌵
Agave
Agave spp.
Soil stabilization. Dryland restoration. Fiber production. Erosion control on slopes.
🌿
Aloe
Aloe vera
Medicinal. Soil stabilization. Low water needs. Value-added cosmetic products. Ground cover.
🍵
Tea Leaf
Camellia sinensis
Mid-elevation. Shade-tolerant. Local consumption + export. Introduced in Phase 2 agroforestry.
🌿
Pohole Fern
Diplazium esculentum
Edible fiddlehead fern. Shade-loving understory. Native Hawaiian food. Wet forest restoration companion.
🌺
Hibiscus
Hibiscus rosa-sinensis
Medicinal tea. Pollinator support. Companion crop. Local market. Cultural significance.
Flagship Reforestation Project · 1,000 Acres · 10-Year Plan
Honokohau Valley 1,000-Acre Project
Partnership: Zeph 808 · Maui Eco Built · Uncle Kimokeo · APU Consulting
Phase 1 · Years 1–3 · 30 Acres

Foundation: Tree Crops & Livestock Rotations

Establish foundational crops: breadfruit, papaya, mango, avocado, coconut. Companion plantings with pigeon pea and kalo for nitrogen-fixing and soil health. Build 3 off-grid tiny homes (Maui Eco Built) with solar, rainwater, and aquaponic systems. Restore 30 loʻi kalo patches. Begin goat, chicken, and cattle rotational grazing on 10 acres. Establish 30 beehives for pollination.

30 Acres3 Tiny Homes30 Loʻi30 BeehivesMaui Eco Built
Phase 2 · Years 3–6 · 150+ Acres

Expansion: Fruit, Nut & Medicinal Crops

Expand to 150+ acres of multi-canopy agroforestry. Introduce coffee under shade trees, lilikoi on trellises, sweet potatoes, hibiscus, tea leaf, and kava. Add pigs for natural tilling on 30+ acre zones. Expand grazing to 50 acres. Scale to 60 beehives. Begin aquaponic nursery production of native koa and ʻōhiʻa seedlings for high-elevation outplanting.

150+ AcresCoffee · Kava60 BeehivesNative NurseryPig Integration
Phase 3 · Years 7–10 · 1,000 Acres

Full Scale: Multi-Canopy Forest Restoration

Full 1,000-acre multi-canopy agroforestry integrated with livestock rotation on 200+ acres. High-elevation koa and sandalwood for ecosystem restoration and long-term timber. Lowland lilikoi, agave, aloe, and food crops at scale. 90 beehives for pollination. 100 loʻi kalo patches. 10 off-grid tiny homes housing 60–100 residents. Full food, water, and energy self-sufficiency.

1,000 Acres100 Loʻi90 Beehives10 Homes100% Self-Sufficient
1,000
Acres restored by Year 10
100
Loʻi kalo patches
6,427
kg fish/year (5 species)
$350K+
Projected annual revenue
90
Beehives for pollination
Carbon Sequestration · Watershed Protection · Biodiversity

Environmental Impact

Carbon Sequestration — 1,000 Acres Agroforestry

Mature koa forests sequester up to 60 metric tonnes CO₂/hectare

  1,000 acres = 404.7 hectares

  Conservative estimate (mixed agroforestry, not pure koa): 25–40 t CO₂/ha


⇒ Annual sequestration: 10,000–16,000 tonnes CO₂/year at maturity

  Equivalent to removing 2,200–3,500 cars from the road annually


ADDITIONAL ECOSYSTEM SERVICES:

  Watershed recharge: Forests increase groundwater infiltration 30–60%

  Erosion prevention: Tree root systems reduce soil loss 80–95%

  Coral reef protection: Reduced sediment runoff to nearshore waters

  Endangered species habitat: Koa forests support io (hawk), pueo (owl), nēnē (goose)


✅ From degraded pasture to productive food forest — the ahupuaʻa restored.

Hybrid Reforestation Strategy

Pure native koa monocultures often fail because native trees grow slowly and invasive grasses dominate the understory. Research from the US Forest Service confirms that high-density multi-species plantings achieve restoration goals faster.

Zeph 808's approach: plant productive food trees (breadfruit, mango, coconut) as the fast-growing canopy, shade out invasive grasses, then introduce native koa, ʻōhiʻa, and sandalwood into the protected understory. The food trees generate revenue while the natives establish.

Aquaponic Nursery Pipeline

Each Zeph 808 aquaponic greenhouse doubles as a native plant nursery. Nutrient-rich aquaponic water accelerates seedling growth rates by 30–50% compared to conventional propagation.

The pipeline: seeds collected → germinated in aquaponic nursery → hardened off → outplanted to restoration sites. This connects the Seed Bank Network directly to reforestation — every partner farm is also a potential nursery.

Aquaponic Nursery30–50% Faster GrowthSeed Bank → Forest
Collaborative Restoration · Mountain to Sea

Partner Contributions

🏠 Maui Eco Built · Infrastructure

Off-grid tiny homes (300–400 sq ft) for Honokohau Valley residents. Bamboo, volcanic rock, and reclaimed wood construction. Solar panels, rainwater catchment, and aquaponic greenhouse integrated into each home.

Farm structures: seed storage, nursery shelters, tool sheds — all permit-exempt modular buildings deployed in days.

Maui Eco Built →

🇫🇷 sanCtum méditerranée · Seed Science

Mediterranean PPAM varieties for companion planting: lavender, rosemary, and thyme as pest-deterrent understory in agroforestry systems. Cameline and nigelle oil crops for on-site fish feed production — reducing import dependency.

Cross-continental seed exchange: Hawaiʻi sends heritage kalo huli, France sends Mediterranean aromatics.

sanCtum méditerranée →

🐢 Kimokeo Foundation · Cultural Stewardship

Uncle Kimokeo Kapahulehua — Hawaiian cultural practitioner and community leader. Guides the loʻi kalo restoration with traditional protocols. Connects the project to Hawaiian values of mālama ʻāina (caring for the land) and kuleana (responsibility).

The Foundation provided land access and community coordination for Lahaina fire relief housing — now extending to Honokohau Valley long-term restoration.

🌱 Seed Bank Network · Genetic Resilience

All reforestation species are sourced through the Zeph 808 Seed Bank Network — ensuring locally adapted, open-pollinated genetics. Heritage kalo varieties propagated vegetatively through huli sharing. Native tree seeds collected and banked for long-term restoration campaigns.

Seed Bank Network →
Year 10 Production · From the Honokohau Valley Plan

Projected Yields at Full Scale

CategorySpeciesScaleAnnual Yield
🥖 AgroforestryBreadfruit (ʻUlu)500 trees15,000 lbs
🥭 AgroforestryMango300 trees12,000 lbs
🥑 AgroforestryAvocado200 trees10,000 lbs
🍈 AgroforestryPapaya400 trees10,000 lbs
🥥 AgroforestryCoconut300 trees9,000 lbs
☕ AgroforestryCoffee20 acres20,000 lbs
🫐 AgroforestryLilikoiTrellis system8,000 lbs
🍠 Ground CropsSweet PotatoesRotational30,000 lbs
🫖 MedicinalKavaShade-grown5,000 lbs
🌾 HeritageKalo (Taro)100 loʻi100,000 lbs
🐟 AquacultureTilapia20% vol2,425 kg
🐟 AquacultureCatfish20% vol1,940 kg
🐟 AquacultureTrout20% vol1,698 kg
🦐 AquacultureFreshwater Shrimp10% vol243 kg
🐟 AquacultureʻOʻopu (Goby)10% vol121 kg
🍯 ApicultureHoney90 hives1,000 kg
🥚 LivestockEggs150 birds95,000 eggs
🐖 LivestockPork30 pigs5,000 lbs
Get Involved · Plant a Tree · Build a Farm

Join the Restoration

Every aquaponic greenhouse is a nursery. Every partner farm is a restoration site. Every seed shared extends the forest. From Honokohau Valley to your backyard — reforestation starts with a single tree.

Seed Bank Network → View All Partners → Join Academy → Container Farms →