The lu shu — known in English as the red-tailed tropicbird — nests on remote Pacific island cliffs and has minimal cultural presence in Western numismatic traditions, making its appearance on a modern Samoan issue a deliberate assertion of regional ecological identity at a moment when Pacific nations have increasingly used commemorative coinage to push back against generic global bullion themes. Gold-plated copper at this size occupies an awkward commercial tier: too heavy for pocket change, too base for investors.
The lu shu — known in English as the red-tailed tropicbird — nests on remote Pacific island cliffs and has minimal cultural presence in Western numismatic traditions, making its appearance on a modern Samoan issue a deliberate assertion of regional ecological identity at a moment when Pacific nations have increasingly used commemorative coinage to push back against generic global bullion themes. Gold-plated copper at this size occupies an awkward commercial tier: too heavy for pocket change, too base for investors.