Grown in large pits (
pela)
pulaka is the main source for
carbohydrates.
Pulaka makes up the bulk of the islanders' traditional diet; it is usually supplemented by fish. Since the unprocessed
corms are toxic, they must always be cooked, usually in an earth oven. The
pulaka pits are at risk from
increasing sea levels, which increase saltwater levels subsoil in the atolls and islands of Tuvalu. On
Fongafale islet of
Funafuti a survey of the pits that have previously been used to grow
pulaka established that the pits were either too saline or very marginal for swamp taro production, although a more salt-tolerant species of
taro (
Colocasia esculenta) was being grown in Fongafale.
Donald Gilbert Kennedy, the resident District Officer in the administration of the
Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony from 1932 to 1938, described the
pulaka pits as usually being shared between different families, with their total area providing an average of about 40 square yards (36.576 square metres) per head of population, although the area of pits varied from island to island depending on the extent of the
freshwater lens that is located under each island. Kennedy also describe the land ownership as having evolved from the pre-European contact system known as
kaitasi (lit. “eat-as-one”), in which the land held by family groups under the control of the senior male member of the
clan – a system of land based on kinship-based bonds, which changed over time to become a land ownership system where the land was held by individual owners - known as
Vaevae (“to divide”). == Agricultural pests==