PROTO-POLYNESIAN ETYMOLOGIES
*Fāpuku [Proto Polynesian] ~ Hāpuku [Māori]
Ephinephelus spp. (Sea bass and groupers).
Tui
The association of reflexes of the Proto-Polynesian word *Fāpuku with plants is found in Māori and Hawaiian, directly reflecting a Proto Central Eastern form *Häpuku, retaining the meaning of the earlier word and extending it to include an association with certain tree ferns.

Proto Nuclear Polynesian: *Word
REFLEXES IN SOME POLYNESIAN LANGUAGES:
Tongan: Fāpuku (Epinephelus merra & similar fish)
Tahitian: Hāpu'u (E. fuscuguttatus, a large fish)
Hawaiian: Hāpu'u (The tree ferns (Cybotium chamissoi, C. glaucum, C. nealiae & C. menziesii [Cybotiaceae]; also the fish Epinephelus guernus).
Tuamotuan: Hāpuku ("A fish species")
Rarotongan: 'āpuku (Epinephelus polypheka [Marbled grouper] & E. tuamotuensis [Reticulated grouper])
Maori: Hāpuku (Polyprion oxygeneios [a species of grouper]); Te Hāpuku (Personification of the grouper and ancestor of cetacians and scaly tree ferns).

Mamaku
Te Hāpuku's child the mamaku, Sphaeropteris medullaris, Aotearoa
(Waitakere Ranges, Auckland. Photo: "Kahuroa", Wikipedia)
Katote
Te Hāpuku's child the kātote, Alsophila smithii
(Remutaka Forest Park. Photo: (c) Jeremy Rolfe, NZPCN)

ASSOCIATED MĀORI PLANT NAMES
ponga, mamaku, kātote (see text below).

Hapu'uLike the link between the tōtara, a forest tree in Aotearoa, and tōtara, the puffer fish in Tahiti, along with the bark of the kauri and the skin of the sperm whale, at least three of the New Zealand tree ferns, two with Polynesian heritage names -- the ponga (Alsophila tricolor) and the mamaku (Sphaeropteris medullaris) -- along with the kātote (A. smithii), are similarly linked to a sea creature. In this case it is the hāpuku, a species of grouper, which in Aotearoa is the mythical parent of the tree ferns, and in Hawaii shares its name with one of the most conspicuous genera of indigenous tree ferns.

S RataThe New Zealand link is recounted in a Ngai Tahu version of the Täwhaki cycle included in Volume 1 of John White's Ancient History of the Maori (1887), pp. 51-2 in the Māori texts and p. 59 of the English translation. Tāwhaki is an important Polynesian culture hero, who through a combination of charm, diplomacy, ingenuity and persistance managed to overcome many formidable phystical, ritual and spiritual obstacles to climb into the heavens. Among his earthly deeds were (in one of the Ngai Tahu accounts) the slaying of some of the family of Te Hāpuku (The Grouper), linked in these accounts with cetacians and tree ferns, in revenge for their responsibility for the murder of his father, Hemā. To avoid Tāwhaki's wrath:

Ponga... a ka whati taua whānau Hāpuku ki te moana, ko ētahi whati ki rō ... ngahere, ā ko ērā i whati ki te moana, i tupu tohorā, me te tini o te ika nui, ā ka mahara te iwi, a ka mate ētahi o rātou.
... Ko ngā ika i whati mai i te patunga a Tāwhaki. Ko Kewa, ko Ihu-puku, ko Paikea, ko Paraoa, ko Toriki, ko Popoia-kore, ko Kekeno, ko Te-rehu, ko Te-whakahao, ko Tere-poka, ko Te-kaki, ko Tawa-iti-roki, ko Te-upoko-hua, no te moana ērā, a ko ngā mea ki uta ki te whenua ko Te-Mamaku, ko Te-Poka (Ponga), ko Kā-Tote: i whakahētia ai te tupu o aua tini mea nei, mō tā rātou kohuru i te matua hakoro o Tā-whaki.

Some of the offspring of Hāpuku fled to the sea, and some to the forest. Those which fled to the sea became whales and other great fish. They were Kewa [Balaena australis, the right whale], Ihupuku [Arctocephalus forsteri, the fur seal], Paikea [another whale species], ... Kekeno, Whakahao and Rāpoka [Arctocephalus hookeri, the sea lion], and Upokohue [Gobicephala malaena, blackfish, and Cephalorhynchus hectori, the porpoise]. These were the fish of the sea; and the Mamaku [Sphaeropteris medullaris], Te Ponga [Alsophila tricolor], Kātote [A. smithii] -- these were called the fish of the forest. All these fish and trees were cursed for the death of Tāwaki's father. [Cf. J. White, Ancient History, Vol I, pp. 51-2 Māori text, macrons added; p. 59, English text.]

Some other versions of this tradition place the sea-mammals (along with sharks, stingrays, and/or insects) within Te Whānau a Punga (Punga's family). Punga was said to be a child of the sea deity, Tangaroa, and responsible for a variety of dangerous and unattractive creatures. However the version involving Te Hāpuku is the one which includes the tree ferns, and is very important for the link it provides between hāpuku as fish and hāpuku/hāpu'u as a tree fern, and thus between the Māori and Hawaiian associations of this word.

Hapu'uLooking down on the hāpu'u ferns, for example in the small craters that they fill in the Volcanos National Park in Hawai'i (or even at the seedling pictured on the left), and the children of Te Hāpuku in the New Zealand forest, it is not hard to see why these ferns should be regarded as the "fish of the forest". One can envisage the young hāpu'u and its New Zealand counterpart the ponga as floating in their natural habitat.

There is also another reason to associate these tree ferns with fish, and this may indeed be the mātauranga Māori link encoded in the Māori narrative. Both the fish and the ferns have scales. If you look carefully at the stipes (stalks of the fronds) of these ferns, especially when they are young, you will see that the edges especially are covered in small scales. This is a characteristic of ferns in the Cyatheaceae, the "scaly tree fern" family (in contrast with the Whekī and its relatives, along with the Hawaiian Hapu'u, which have hairy stipes). Since the tree ferns named in the Māori account are all in the Cyathea family, it is very likely that the composer of the narrative noticed the scales which provided a tangible connection between the tree ferns and Te Hāpuku.

A NOTE ON TAXONOMY OF TREE FERN SPECIES. A few months after this page was revised in 2022, and shortly after Te Māra Reo Kawerongo #3 was sent out, a decision was made that the NZPCN database should adopt a revised taxonomy for these plants following the publication of several comprehensive DNA and taxonomic studies overseas. The New Zealand tree ferns formerly placed under Cyathea were reassigned to the re-established genera Sphaeropteris (C. medullaris) and Alsophila (all the rest -- with the former C. dealbata being re-named A. tricolor).

The main additional consequential changes required for this web site are: Cyathea parksiae becomes Sphaeropteris parksiae; Cyathea truncata a.k.a. Alsophila truncata becomes Sphaeropteris truncata; Alsophila rugosula is merged with and replaced by Sphaeropteris lunulata; Cyathea decurrens becomes Alsophila decurrens; Cyathea affinis becomes Alsophila tahitensis; also Angiopteris commutata becomes Angiopteris evecta. The genus Cibotium is shifted from the Dixoniaceae to a separate family, Cibotiaceae. These changes will be made page by page as time permits.

The reasons for these changes are outlined in Kawerongo #3 and #4. It should also be noted that these changes are not universally regarded as necessary. If you search for the generic name Alsophila on the Atlas of Living Australia website, for example, you will get this message:

genus: Alsophila R.Br. (accepted name: Cyathea)

Similarly, the botanists at Te Papa Tongarewa (Museum of New Zealand) prefer to regard Cyathea as a single genus, with Alsophila, Sphaeropteris and Cyathea s.s. as subgenera or divisions of the larger grouping.

 

C_chamissoi
Young plant of Cibotium chamissoi -Hāpu'u
(Kate Lynch's nursery, Kaneohe, Hawai'i. Photo: RB!)
Hapu'u-HVP
Hāpu'u, Cibotium sp. in old crater,
Volcano National Park, Hawai'i. (Photo: RB.)
C_glaucum
Koru of Hāpu'u pulu, Cibotium glaucum
(Young plant, Kaneohe, Oahu, Hawai'i. Photo: RB.)
Hapuu
Koru of Hāpu'u 'ī'ī, Cibotium menziesii, Hawai'i.
(Photo (c) Dr Gerry Carr, Honolulu.)

MamakuKoru of Mamaku, Sphaeropteris medullaris, Aotearoa.
(Te Māra Reo. Photo: R.B.)
Katote
Detail of stipe of the Kātote Alsophila smithii
(Te Māra Reo. Photo: RB.)
Tapa-Samoa
Cibotium menziesii - Hapu'u 'ī'ī (Makawao Forest Road,
Maui, Hawai'i. Photo (c) Forrest and Kim Starr.)
Tapa-Samoa
Koru of Cibotium chamissoi - Hapu'u
(In cultivation, Kaneohe, Oahu, Hawai'i. Photo: RB.)
Further information about Sphaeropteris medullaris and Alsophila tricolor can be found on the linked pages for mamaku and ponga respectively. There is some information about Alsophila smithii in the NZPCN database. This latter tree fern grows best in damp, sheltered environments in the forest, and is found throughout New Zealand (including Te Māra Reo). It can reach heights of up to 7 or 8 metres in favourable environments. There is information about the Cibotium species in Daniel Palmers's Hawaiian Ferns and Kathy Valier's Ferns of Hawaii (see bibliography); the University of Hawaii's School of Tropical Agriculture also has an information bulletin about the hapu'u tree ferns available for download. The Cook Island Biodiversity Network Database and Wikipedia are good places to start looking for information about the tropical plants. Websites with information on New Zealand plants include Robert Vennell's The Meaning of Trees, the New Zealand Plant Conservation Network, and the Landcare / Manaaki Whenua NZ Flora database, all of which have links to other sources of information. The University of Auckland School of Biological Sciences also has an excellent website dedicated to New Zealand native plants.
Photographs: The inset photos are (in order) [1] Hāpu'u as fish (Hawai'i), photo: EOL website; [2] Hāpuku as fish (Aotearoa), photo: Blue Ocean website; [3] A grove of ponga, Alsophila dealbata, children of Te Hāpuku who escaped to swim in the forest (photo: NZ Department of Conservation); [4] Hāpu'u as fern - a very young plant of Cibotium glaucum, in cultivation, Hawai'i (photo: RB). The other photographs are acknowledged in the captions. We are grateful to all the photographers for permission to use their work.

Citation: This page may be cited as: R. A. Benton (2023) “*Fāpuku ~ Hāpuku” (web page periodically updated), Te Māra Reo. "http://www.temarareo.org/PPN-Fapuku.html" (Date accessed)

(Hoki atu ki runga -- Go back to the top of the page.)


Te Mära Reo, c/o Benton Family Trust, "Tumanako", RD 1, Taupiri, Waikato 3791, Aotearoa / New Zealand. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 New Zealand License