African Mahogany (Khaya ivorensis) is one of the most important timber trees of tropical West Africa, producing a rich, reddish-brown wood that has served as the primary substitute for American Mahogany (Swietenia) since the mid-20th century. This magnificent emergent rainforest tree, a member of the mahogany family (Meliaceae), can reach 50-60 m in height with a massive buttressed trunk. Its wood is prized worldwide for high-end furniture, cabinetry, boat building, and musical instruments.
• The premier African timber species, often called "true" African Mahogany
• Wood closely resembles genuine mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) in appearance and properties
• One of the most valuable timber species on the African continent
• The genus Khaya contains approximately 6 species, all native to tropical Africa
• Now listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List due to decades of intensive logging
• Distributed across Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Congo, and into the western Democratic Republic of Congo
• Found in moist lowland tropical forests from sea level to approximately 500 m elevation
• Prefers regions with annual rainfall of 1,400-2,500 mm
• Occurs as a scattered canopy to emergent tree at densities of typically less than 1 tree per hectare
• Often found growing near rivers and streams in forest habitats
• First described by the French botanist Auguste Jean Baptiste Chevalier
• Has been commercially exploited since the colonial era, with peak exports in the 1960s-1980s
• Over 80% of original African Mahogany populations have been logged
Trunk and Crown:
• Height: 50-60 m with a tall, clean, cylindrical bole extending 20-30 m
• Trunk diameter: 100-180 cm, with prominent buttresses extending 2-3 m up the trunk
• Bark: brown to dark reddish-brown, thick, rough, with a bitter taste due to limonoid compounds
• Crown: large, rounded to umbrella-shaped, densely branched
Leaves:
• Even-pinnately compound, alternate, 15-30 cm long with 4-6 pairs of leaflets
• Leaflets are elliptic to oblong, 6-12 cm long and 2.5-5 cm wide
• Dark glossy green above, paler beneath
• New leaves emerge reddish-pink before maturing to green
• Briefly deciduous during the dry season
Flowers:
• Small, creamy-white to greenish-white, 5-7 mm long
• Arranged in large, spreading axillary panicles 10-20 cm long
• Pollinated by insects, particularly bees, flies, and moths
Fruit:
• A large, woody, globose capsule 5-8 cm in diameter
• Grayish-brown when mature, splitting into 4-5 woody valves
• Contains numerous flat, winged seeds 2-4 cm long
• Seeds are wind-dispersed from the elevated crown position
• A canopy to emergent tree that plays a major structural role in forest architecture
• Winged seeds are dispersed by wind from the elevated crown position
• Flowers provide nectar for diverse insect pollinators during the dry season
• Bark contains bitter limonoid compounds that deter bark-boring insects and herbivores
• Supports diverse epiphyte communities including orchids, ferns, and mosses
• Large crown provides habitat for nesting birds, bats, and arboreal mammals
• Plays a critical role in carbon storage due to its massive biomass
• Occurs at naturally low densities, making populations highly susceptible to overexploitation
• Natural regeneration is limited and depends on canopy gap formation
• Requires hot, humid tropical conditions with annual rainfall of 1,400 mm or more
• Prefers deep, well-drained, fertile loamy or clay-loam soils
• Propagation is by seed; winged seeds should be collected promptly and sown fresh
• Seeds lose viability rapidly, usually within 1-3 weeks of collection
• Germination occurs within 10-21 days under warm, moist conditions
• Seedlings require shade for the first 3-6 months, then gradually need more light
• Growth is moderate, with trees reaching 5-8 m in 5 years under optimal conditions
• Planting densities of 100-250 trees per hectare for timber production
• Rotation cycles of 40-70 years are needed for high-quality timber
• Responds well to silvicultural treatments including canopy liberation thinning
재미있는 사실
African Mahogany bark contains compounds called limonoids, the same class of chemicals found in citrus fruits. These bitter substances protect the tree from insect attack and are so effective that the bark has been used traditionally as a fish poison and insect repellent. The wood also naturally resists termites and marine borers, making it one of the few tropical timbers suitable for boat building without chemical treatment.
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