Mana Ulaula (Mana Ha Ulaula)
General characteristics: Medium in height to tall, slender, erect, maturing within 9 to 12 months, producing two or three branches; readily identified by purplish-red flecking along the entire petiole, with almost complete absence of green coloration.
Petiole: 70 to 90 cm tall, slender, slightly curved edges at apex, flecked with purplish-red, almost lacking in green, with narrow reddish edge, a dark reddish-purple ring at base with lilac-pink for about 3 cm above.
Leaf blade: 40 to 50 cm long, 30 to 35 cm wide, 35 to 45 cm from tip to base of sinus, ovate, thin in texture, light green; margins slightly undulate; piko small, purple; veins purplish on lower surface of lobes; lobes acute with narrow sinus.
Corm: Flesh white tinged with pink, especially near apex, with yellowish fibers; skin dark lilac-pink.
Inforescense: Peduncle light purplish flecked with dark reddish-purple areas at base and above constriction; spath 14 to 17 cm long, the lower purple at base and at constriction, the upper portion yellow, tightly rolled; spadix 4 to 5 cm long, slender, the sterile appendage 5 to 6 mm long.
Origin, and derivation of name: Native variety; Ulaula refers to purplish-red-flecked petioles.
Distribution: Comparitively rare; planted in a few scattered localities on Hawaii and Maui, nearly always planted under upland culture.
Use: Mainly as table taro for home use.
Taken from “Taro Varieties in Hawaii” Bulletin 84 by CTAHR