mahogany

With a range from Mexico to southern Amazonia in Brazil, the most widespread and the only true mahogany species commercially grown today. Illegal logging and its highly destructive environmental effects, led to the species’ placement in 2003 on ‘Appendix II’ of Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) for the first time.

West Indian or Cuban Mahogany

Native to southern Florida and the Caribbean, was formerly dominant in the Mahogany trade, but is not in widespread commercial use since World War II.

Pacific Coast Mahogany

A small and often twisted Mahogany tree limited to seasonally dry forests in Pacific Central America that is of limited commercial utility.

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