Its fruit was reportedly the preferred food of the now-extinct Ula-ai-hawane--a niche that has been seemingly filled by the introduced Lavender Waxbill.
Common Waxbill | Lavender Diamond | The Lavender Hill Mob | Orange-cheeked Waxbill | Lavender MRT Station | Lavender Bay, New South Wales | Lavender Bay | Robert E. Lavender | Lavender Waxbill | Lavender Castle | Ian Lavender | Daniela Lavender |