Yes, the Yellow Hibiscus
The Hawaii state flower is the Pua Aloalo Hibiscus.
The Hibiscus Flower.
Hibiscus
Hawaiian hibiscus.
The Hawaiian state flower is the yellow hibiscus. The Hawaiian name is pua aloalo. Each island has a lei flower.
Hawaii
Any of the seven native species known to exist on the Hawaiian Islands that are called Hawaiian hibiscus.
Aloha: Sorry I missed this. The Nene (pronounced "nay-nay") is a land bird and a variety of Hawaiian Goose. It has adapted itself to life in the harsh lava country by transforming its webbed feet into a claw-like shape and modifying its wing structure for shorter flights.The hibiscus, called Pua Aloalo in HI, was the official Territorial Flower, adopted in the early 1920s. In 1988, the yellow hibiscus which is native to the islands was selected to represent Hawaii.Say [poo-ah ah-lo-ah-lo]
The hibiscus is the official state flower: back in the 1920s, when Hawaii was still a territory, their leaders chose this flower because it was native to Hawaii, very beautiful, and in traditional Hawaiian culture, it represented royalty or authority. In 1959, when Hawaii became a state, the legislature decided to keep many of the symbols that were meaningful to the people who grew up there; thus, since the hibiscus was one of the most popular flowers in Hawaii, it became the official state flower.
The Puerto Rican hibiscus (Thespesia grandflora).
The Official State Flower is the Hawaiian hibiscus.
Red is one of the many colors of the hibiscus flower, the state flower. To the ancient Hawaiians, the color red was a sacred color and denoted royalty and power.