1  | FAMILY: 
ANACARDIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Poupartia castanea COMMON NAME: Bois 
Lubine STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: Morne 
seche DESCRIPTION:  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Poupartia pubescens COMMON NAME: Bois de 
poupart; Bois blanc STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Chamarel. 
Found on rocky, steep slope of the West. DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree with whitish bark. Endemic  | 
2  | FAMILY: 
ANNONACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Xylopia 
amplexicaulis COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: A shrub 
reaching 1.5-2m high or small tree, branches cylindrical, 
bark brown, finely striated longitudinally, glabrous. Leaves sessile, 
very close to each other, limb dark green, radiant, coriaceous, oblong to oval 
oblong, twisted at the base, pointed to obtuse at the tip, glabrous on both 
sides. Flowers axillary, solitary, pedicels firm, 5-20mm long, glabrescent. 
Petals are 6, valvate. Fruit have pedicel 2.5-3 cm long, red carmine at 
maturity, and glabrous.
   | 
3.  | FAMILY: 
APOCYNACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Ochrosia borbonica COMMON NAME: Bois 
jaune;Quinquina du pays STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: L'example Bel 
Ombre DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching 20 – 40 feet high and glabrous in all its parts. Leaves are 3 rarely 4 
in a whorl, distinctly petioled, oblong or oblanceolate-oblong, obtuse or 
subacute, cuneate at the base, 3-6 inch long, glossy, with numerous parallel 
distinct spreading veins below. Flowers are dense, 
sessile or in short peduncled terminal cymes; pedicels short, with densely 
imbricated small persistent bracts. Drupes, ovoid or oblong, pointed, above an 
inch long.  
 
  | 
4.  | FAMILY: 
ARALIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC 
NAME: Polyscias gracilis COMMON NAME: Bois boeuf; 
Bois papaye STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 2-3m high, branches crowned, 10-15mm diameter. Leaves slender, 15-30cm 
long, limb oblong, oblong to elliptical, obtuse at the 
tip, very asymmetrical and more or less rounded at the base, thin. Inflorescence 
is in panicles, 15-22cm long, formed by umbel. Petals 5-6. Fruit is sub 
spherical to ovoid  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Polyscias neraudiana COMMON NAME: Bois boeuf; 
Bois papaye STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 3-4m high, bark grayish brown, scaly, twigs 7-13mm in diameter. Leaves 
grouped at the top of twigs, base of petiole thickened. Foliage sometimes 
coriaceous, limb elliptical to oblong to oval to asymmetrical at the base, 
rounded to pointed at the tip. Inflorescence lateral, inserted below the leaves. 
Peduncle is 1-4cm long. Flowers are sub sessile or with pedicel 4mm long and 
enlarged.   | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Polyscias paniculata COMMON NAME: Bois boeuf; 
Bois papaye STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: An erect, 
glabrous shrub, with stout terete branchlets. It has long petioled leaves; blade 
6-9 inch long; leaflets usually 7, short-stalked, oblong, obtuse, shining, 
sub-coriaceous, deltoid or rather rounded at base, 4-6 inch long. Flowers are 
dense subspicate, peduncled racemes 2-4 inch long, with 
a rosette of lanceolate bracts at the base before expansion; pedicels very short 
and thick, not articulated, with a distinct cupule clasping the calyx. Corolla 
is hemispherical; petals and stamens about 16. Fruit is hemispherical with 6 
falcate styles and 6 deep grooves.   | 
5.  | FAMILY: 
BEGONIACEAE   | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Begonia 
salaziensis COMMON NAME: Begonia 
sauvage; Oseille marronne STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Bassin 
Blanc DESCRIPTION: Plant with 
straight bud or curved. Leaves oblong. Flowers white. Plants suffuescent 
ramified, glabrous, about 30cm to 2.4m high; bud straight; lamina oval-oblong 
pointed or acuminate, bright green, margin sineuse; petiole 4-10cm 
long. Inflorescence in axillary cyme having both female and male flowers, 
white tepals.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Colea 
colei COMMON NAME: Bois 
margoze STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: Le Pouce; 
Perrier DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching the height of 3-5 metre, with a unique stalk or little branched out. 
Flowers are tubular, lavender-pink, and yellow inside. Flowering season is 
March/April. Flowers are found in groups of protuberances or knob at the bud. 
Fruits are elongated.  | 
6.  | FAMILY: 
CAMPANULACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Lobelia 
serpens COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A perennial 
herb, with wide-trailing slender mostly glabrous stems, simple or with ascending 
branches. Leaves are membranous, abundant; lower oblanceolate, short-petioled, 
the rest linear, sessile, 1/12 to 1/8 inch broad, obscurely or distinctly 
toothed, under an inch long, narrowed from the middle to the base and pointed. 
Flowers are found from the axils of the upper leaves in a lax raceme; pedicels ¼ to ½ inch long, mostly shorter than their subtending 
leaves. Corolla is ¼ inch long; lobes blue, lower obovate, the throat 
yellowish, blue spotted. Capsule obovoid, ¼ inch long, scarely protruding from 
the calyx-tube.   | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Nesocodon mauritianus COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Cascade 
500ft DESCRIPTION: A small 
shrub reaching 30 – 40cm high, branched at the base, ascending, glabrous, with 
distinct foliage scares. Leaves inserted in helice, narrowly grouped on the 
apical bud, linearly-obovate or strictly oblong, pointed, sessile, glabrous, 
bright green. Flowers are solitary. Fruit of capsule type.  | 
7.  | FAMILY: 
CELASTRACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pleurostylia leucocarpa COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'Olive des Seychelles STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: Gaulette 
Seree DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched shrub, 12 – 15 feet high, glabrous throughout, with quadrangular 
branchlets. Leaves are short petioled, obovate-oblong, coriaceous, shining, 
venulose, obtuse or emarginate, 1 - 1 1/2 inch long; base cuneate. Flowers are 
in short peduncled axillary cymes; pedicels very short. Petals oblong, whitish, 
1/12 inch deep. Capsule rather fleshy, 1/6 inch long, 
obliquely tipped by the short persistent style, containing 1 large dark brown 
obovoid seed.  | 
8.   | FAMILY: 
CLUSIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Calophyllum parviflorum COMMON NAME: Tatamaka a 
petite feuilles STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:
   | 
9.   | FAMILY: 
COMBRETACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Cylindrocline commersonii COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Le 
Pouce DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
reaching 1 meter in height with branches thick, expanded and covered on top with 
a dense, woolly hair growth. Leaves are pale golden green in colour. Flowers are 
dark pink and small. Flowering season is February to May. Found on Le 
Pouce.   | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Cylindrocline lorencei COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Flowering 
season is Dec to Jan and June.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Faujasia salicifolia COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Indeterminate LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Faujasiopsis boivinii COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Extinct LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(v)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Faujasiopsis reticulata COMMON NAME: 
L'Oreille de Souris STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Corps de 
Garde DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
with leaves oval to subcircular. Flowers are white and often with a tinch of 
purple pink.  | 
(vi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Helichrysum caespitosum COMMON NAME: Immortelle 
du Pouce; Immortelle du pays STATUS: 
Petrin LOCATION: Le Pouce, 
Trois Mamelles, Corps de Garde DESCRIPTION: Smaller 
than a small shrub and are found in tufts. Leaves are tomentose and silvery gray 
on both surfaces. Found on rocky cliff and fissure. Le Pouce, Trois Mamelles, 
Corps de Garde.  | 
(vii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Helichrysum proteoides COMMON NAME: Immortelle 
du Pouce; Immortelle du pays STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: 
Florin DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
reaching 2 m in height. Leaves covered with whitish hairs. Found on humid summit 
of mountains.  | 
(viii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Helichrysum yuccifolium COMMON NAME: Immortelle 
du Pouce STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
reaching a height of 2-3 meters height. Leaves silvery white, typical of 
indigenous forest and lives in between the heath.  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Parafaujasia mauritiana (pinifolia) COMMON NAME: Bois 
cassant STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
very rare, reaching the height of 3 meters. Leaves linear. Flowers yellow, 3mm 
long.  | 
(x)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Psiadia 
balsamica COMMON NAME: Baume d'Ile 
Plate STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Psiadia 
canescens COMMON NAME: Baume d'Ile 
Plate STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Psiadia 
cataractae COMMON NAME: Baume d'Ile 
Plate STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: 
Tamarind Falls DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Psiadia 
lithospermifolia COMMON NAME: Baume d'Ile 
Plate STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: Le 
Morne DESCRIPTION:  | 
10.  | FAMILY: 
CUNONIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Weinmannia biviniana COMMON NAME: Arbre 
mouche a miel; Arbre a miel STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 6 metre in height. Leaves are pennee and numerous. Flowers are small, 
numerous and whitish. Flowering season is Jan – July. The bark is rich in 
tannin  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Weinmannia tinctoria COMMON NAME: Arbre 
mouche a miel STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Cascade 
500ft DESCRIPTION:  | 
11.  | FAMILY: 
EBENACAEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros angulata COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching 20m high, with only one trunk; bark almost black. Leaves with hardy 
petiole; elliptical, +- cuneiform or rarely rounded at the base, obtuse on top, 
subcoriaceous but still flexible, glabrous on both surfaces, shiny and dark 
green on top, paler beneath. Female flowers are solitary. Fruit: a berry, 4-5cm 
long, ovoid.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros boutoniana COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene marbre a grosses feuilles STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: Morne seche; 
Ile aux Aigrettes DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 5-6 m high, generally with only one trunk, of 15-25cm in diameter; bark 
almost black. Twigs, relatively thick. Leaves with hardy petiole, 2-3m in 
length; lamina, oboval-oblong, cuneiform at the base, obtuse on top, coriaceous, 
rigid, glabrous on both surfaces, dark green on the upper surface and paler 
beneath. Male flowers, in cluster. Female flowers, solitary. Fruit: a berry, +- 
spherical or oboval, 5cm in length.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros chrysophyllos COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene blanc STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree, with glabrous very zigzag slender branchlets. Leaves are oblong or 
oblong-lanceolate, glossy, green above, coriaceous, subacute, deltoid at the 
base, 3-5 inch long, only the distant branching main veins beneath raised; 
petiole ½ to 1 inch long. Flowers are1-4, sessile in the axils of the 
leaves. Fruits are nearly globose, pulpy, above an inch long, 7-10 – 
celled.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros diversifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A small 
much-branched glabrous tree of about 15 feet, with pale ashy leafy branches. 
Leaves are elliptical rounded at the apex, rigidly coriaceous, dark green and 
glossy above, pale green with reddish midrib and delicate reticulation beneath; 
those of the barren bottom-shoots or of young trees linear, petiole 1/16 to ¼ 
inch. long. Fruits are sessile, globose or oblong, 
1-11/2 inch, 12-or fewer-celled, resting at the base on a thick shortly 
5-6-lobed appressed calyx.  | 
(v)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros egrettarum COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene marbre STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Ile aux 
Aigrettes DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 5-6m high, with relatively hard trunk, branched out relatively low, 
with semispherical cyme; bark grey, but covered with lichen. The small branches 
and the twigs are generally inserted at about 90º. Oval-oblong Juvenile leaves, 
12cm long, have purple secondary veins on the lower surface. Mature leaves have 
thick and short petiole. Lamina is oval, heart-shaped at the base, +- obtuse at 
the tip, coriaceous, rigid, glabrous on both side, paler beneath. Inflorescence 
of 3-8 whereby male and female flowers are similar. Berry spherical or ovoid, 
3-4cm long.  | 
(vi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros hemiteles COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Chamarel DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching 8m high with dark grey bark. The leaves, 15mm long, have slender thin 
petiole; lamina is oval-elliptical, +- cuneiform at the base, obtuse at the tip, 
subcoriaceous but still flexible, glabrous on both faces, paler 
beneath. Solitary male flowers, rarely 2, in the axil of the leaves. Solitary 
female flowers. Corolla with tube 12mm, 6-8 lobes oboval.  Berry is ovoid or elliptical, 
about 3cm long.  | 
(vii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros leucomelas COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene marbre; bois d'ebene a veines STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: 
Cabinet DESCRIPTION: A shrub or 
a low tree, with glabrous nearly straight terete branchlets. Leaves are nearly 
sessile, oblong, obtuse, 4-6 inch long, rigidly coriaceous, glossy, cordate at 
the base, with only the main veins raised below. Flowers are1-3 from the nodes, 
surrounded by several round dry persistent bracts. Corolla - tube longer than 
the calyx, silky on the outside; lobes 5-6, round, spreading, orange-red. Fruits 
are globose, smooth, shining, 11/4 inch broad.  | 
(viii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros melanida COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene marbre; bois d'ebene a veines STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: Morne 
seche DESCRIPTION: A tree, 
with slender terete virgate glabrous branchlets. Leaves are oblong, obtuse, 
rigidly coriaceous, glossy, bright green, 3-4 inch long, deltoid or rather 
rounded at the base, the principal anastomosing veins only raised beneath; 
petiole ¼ -1/3 inch long. Flowers are 1-4 from crowded nodes, the bracts very 
minute. Fruit-calyx nearly flat, above an inch broad, the lobes produced at the 
border into a broad reflexed-crisped wing. Corolla - lobes 5-6, 1/3inch long and 
broad, round-obovate, densely brown-silky on the outside. Fruits are glossy, an 
inch thick.  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros neraudii COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: Vulnerable; 
Protected LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching a height of about 10m having smooth brown bark. The leaves have quite 
slender and thin petiole,5-10mm long; lamina is oval, elliptical or rhombical , 
+- rounded or heart-shaped at the base, almost always obtuse at the tip, 
subcoriaceous but still supple, glabrous on both surface, dull green. Flowers 
are solitary and sessile. A green berry which look 
likes a gland of the chene with its cupule, 3cm long, ovoid.  | 
(x)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros nodosa COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: Vulnerable; 
Protected LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched shrub, with grey glabrous branches with the close nodes much 
thickened. Leaves are oblong, rigidly coriaceous, glossy, obtuse or rather 
pointed, 2-3 inch long, rounded at the base, the main veins beneath very fine 
and little raised; petiole ¼-1/2 long. Flowers are 1-2, nearly sessile at the 
crowded nodes.  | 
(xi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros pterocalyx COMMON NAME: Bois 
d'ebene a calices alle STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: 
Macchabe DESCRIPTION: Shrub of 
2-4m high, generally with several slender and thin trunks with the bark almost 
black. Leaves with slender and thin petiole, 8-10mm long; lamina is 
elliptical,+- cuneiform at the base, rather obtuse at 
the tip, subcoriaceous but still flexible, glabrous on both surfaces, paler 
beneath. Flowers are solitary. An ovoid berry, 3-5cm long.  | 
(xii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Diospyros revaughanii COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: Bel 
Ombre DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching a height of 3-4m, without cyme. The trunk is slender and thin, 
branching rather low. The bark is grey but covered with lichens. Branches and 
twigs are thick, almost inserted at 90º. Juvenile leaves, oval-oblong, petiole, 
12-15cm long, with purple secondary veins beneath. Adult leaves are sessile or 
subsessile with thick petiole. Leaf blade is +- circular, heart-shaped at the 
base, obtuse at the tip, coriaceous, rigid, glabrous on both surface, paler 
beneath. Flowers are found in glomerule of 3-8. The berry is spherical or ovoid, 
3-5cm long, sticky.  | 
12.  | FAMILY: 
ELAEOCARPACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Elaeocarpus bojeri COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Grand 
Bassin DESCRIPTION: A shrub or 
small tree, glabrous except on the young parts bearing very small hairs. 
Stipules absent. Leaves inserted in helix, grouped at the top of twigs, petiole 
8-30mm long, lamina is oval to elliptical. Flowers are 4-7, pendulous, flower 
bud ovoid. Petals are 5, obovate, glabrous on the exterior but hairy close to 
the base, on the margins and interior, and divided in 3-5 lobes. Disc with lobe 
rounded, velvet. Young fruit strictly fusiform.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Elaeocarpus integrifolius COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching 15m high, trunk compressed and branches thickened and vegetative part 
glabrescent. Stipules reduced. Leaves close to one another, opposed, petiole 
hard, 4-8mm long, limb dark green, more or less oblong, sometimes elliptical, 
pointed to rounded at the tip, twisted to rounded at 
the base, coriaceous. Inflorescence axillary, 8-16cm long, bears 9-18 flowers 
with pedicels 8-17mm long. Petals are 4, largely oboval or obtriangular, 9-12mm 
long. Disc quite big. Fruit is ellipsoid, pointed at the tip.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Elaeocarpus serratus COMMON NAME: 
Olivier Ceylon STATUS: LOCATION: Jardin de 
Pamplemousses. DESCRIPTION: A tree 
median in size. Fruits ovoid and sickly sweet.  | 
13.  | FAMILY: 
ERICACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Agauria 
salicifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
cabris STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: 
Tamarind Falls DESCRIPTION: A much 
branched glabrous shrub, 4-5 feet high. Distinctly petioled, lanceolate, entire, 
acuminate, cuneate at the base, green above, pale beneath, 2-3 inch long, ¼ -1/2 
inch broad. Flowers are abundant close subsecund axillary and terminal racemes 
2-3 inch long; pedicels spreading, 1/8 –1/4 inch long. Corolla is oblong, 
purplish, ¼ -1/3 inch long. Fruit is a globose, glabrous capsule, the size of a 
pea, splitting into 5 valves, girt by the persistent clasping 
calyx.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Phillippia abietina COMMON NAME: Bruyere des 
montagnes STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched shrub, 2-5 feet high, with crowded erect branches. Leaves are ¼ 
-1/3 long, erecto-patent, densely crowded, glossy on both sides, ligulate, 
rigidly coriaceous, with revolute edges. Flowers are clustered at the end of the 
branches in the axils of the leaves, on very short pedicels. Corolla is 
campanulate, reddish-brown.  | 
14.   | FAMILY: 
ERYTHROXYLACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Erythroxylum hypericifolium COMMON NAME: Bois a 
balais; Bois d'huile; bois de dames STATUS: Not 
threatened LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree reaching 7-8m high, trunk 15-20cm diameters, bark smooth, pale gray. 
Branches bear numerous lenticels, flattened and slender at the level of leaves. 
Foliated limb is pale green, elliptical, 1.2-1.5 cm long. Petiole is red, 2-3mm 
long, juvenile plant having leaves 3-4mm long, heterophyllous. Flowers are 
solitary, 3-4mm diameter. Petals are 5, 3mm long, white. Fruit is radiant red, 
pulp waterlogged, ellipsoidal, and pendulous at the end of the slender 
pedicel.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Erythroxylum laurifolium COMMON NAME: Bois de 
ronde STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION:DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub reaching 7m high, trunk 10-15cm diameter at the base. Branches flattened, 
thick by 4-5mm. Leaves with limb more or less strictly elliptical, exterior dark 
green, interior pale green. Flowers solitary or usually found in fascicles of 3 
or 7, the branches bear numerous scales forming an inflorescence composed of 
10-12 fascicles, pedicels 5-13mm long. Flowers are 10-14mm diameter. Petals are 
5-9mm long. Drupe is red, pulp watterlogged, 1.5-2 cm long, weakly curved. 
Flower season is September to October and January to February.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Erythroxylum macrocarpum COMMON NAME: Bois 
piment; bois de ronde STATUS: Not 
threatened LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A shrub 
reaching 3-5m high. Leaves with limb oboval sometimes subcircular or strictly 
elliptical, thick, dark green above, interior side greenish white, juvenile 
leaves more straight than the adult ones. Flowers 
solitary or in fascicle of 3, sometimes numerous fascicles are grouped on 
foliated branches. Pedicels are 0.8-1cm long in section, more or less 
pentagonal. Flowers 6-7mm diameter, calyx 1,5mm long. Petals 6mm long, 
elliptical or oboval. Drupe red, a little curved, 1-1,5cm long. Flower season 
February to March.  | 
15.   | FAMILY: 
EUPHORBIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Claoxylon linostachys COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Macchabee; Mt 
rest DESCRIPTION: Shrub, 6 to 
10 feet high, with terete glabrous branchlets. Leaves are oblongceolate-oblong, 
coriaceous, scrabrous on both surfaces, deltoid or obtuse at the tip, cuneate at 
the base, 4-8 inch long, obscurely crenulate; petiole 1/8 –1/4 inch 
long. Flowers are in lax racemes 4-6 inch long, on 2-3 inch axillary 
peduncles. Type of fruits: Capsule glabrous, under ¼ inch broad, deeply 
3-lobed.
   | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Croton 
vaughanii COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Perrier DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching 7m high, with crowned branches. Leaves become reddish orange before 
senescence. Branches more or less longitudinally wrinkled, scales cover the 
young parts. Leaves are grouped at the top of branches, petiole 1-1,5cm long, 
scaly as the branches, limb very oval to sub-circular, obtuse or rounded at the 
tip, rounded to sub-twisted at the base, having at the juvenile state like the 
branches, of dense scaly hairs.
   | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Drypetes caustica COMMON NAME: Bois bleu; 
Bois de bitte STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching 20m high. Bark grayish, pale, and slender. Leaves dense, of a dark gray 
colour. Leaves alternate, distant to one another, petiole 
5-10mm long, generally turn black when dry, limb elliptical or 
oval-elliptical, suppressed at the tip and base, glabrous, adult stage 
coriaceous. Flowers 1-4, pedicels 5-8mm long, glabrous or bear very short hairs. 
Male and female flower present. Fruit globose to ellipsoidal, yellowish orange 
with brown points dispersed on it.  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Lautembergia neraudiana COMMON NAME: Bois 
caf-caf; Kafkaf STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 6m high, trunk 15cm diameters, bark brownish pink, quite smooth. 
Branches usually grooved becoming hard by the presence of lenticels and 
persistent protuberances onto which are inserted the leaves. Leaves sometimes 
grouped in pseudo-whorl, sometimes distant, petiole 3-10cm long, limb oboval to 
elliptical at the tip, generally obtuse or rounded at the base. Male 
inflorescence multiflore, usually grouped on the 
branches which are slender and ramified from the base, 12cm long, short hairs, 
+_ velvet. Flower bud is 1-2mm long, +_ tetragonal. Female inflorescence is in 
raceme, 7cm long having same hairiness as male inflorescence, lobes triangular. 
Capsule rounded, trilobed, 7-8mm long. Flowers rarely.  | 
(v)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Macaranga mauritiana COMMON NAME: Bois 
violon STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree, 
15 to 20 feet high, with stout branchlets marked by the scars of fallen 
leaves. Young parts clothed with brown tomentum, which entirely disappears from 
the mature leaves. Leaves are subcoriaceous, glabrous, ½-1 foot long, entire, 
deltoid at the apex, equally rounded at the base, nearly as broad as long; 
petiole 3-4 inch long. Flowers are of both sexes on ascending peduncles from the 
axils of the crowded leaves. Males in dense clusters, sessile, terminal and 
lateral on the peduncles, subtended by tomentose foliaceous bracts with large 
glands near the edge. Female flowers few to a peduncle. Type of fruits: Capsule 
follicular, glabrous, half an inch long, obliquely globose, crowned by the 
remains of the cylindrical style and large lanceolate 
stigma.
   | 
16.   | FAMILY: 
FLACOURTIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Casaeria coriacea COMMON NAME: Bois 
callant STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A shrub or 
small tree reaching 7-8m high, young branches in zigzag, bark reddish brown, 
with numerous lenticels. Leaves have limb of variable form, size and texture, 
more or less oval, oboval, elliptical or oblong, obtuse or rounded at the tip, 
cuneiform at the base, glabrous. Inflorescence is in fascicles, axillary, 3-6 
flowers, pedicels slender and glabrous, 3-8mm long. 
Flowers are greenish white. Fruit oblong or conical. 1.5-2.5cm long, 0.8cm 
diameter. Flower season November – March. Fruit season May – June.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Casaeria tinifolia COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 6-7m high, trunk about 15cm diameter, young 
branches a little zigzag, bark reddish brown, with numerous lenticels. Leaves 
have limb, entire, glabrous, more or less oval, 
elliptical or oblong, obtuse at the tip. Inflorescence is axillary, in fascicles 
of 2-3 flowers, pedicels glabrous, 0.8-1.5cm long. Flowers are yellowish white. 
Ripe fruit and seed not seen.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Scolopia heterephylla COMMON NAME: Bois 
goyave STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: Morne 
seche DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 6-7m high, trunk 20-30cm diameter, rarely reaching 15m high and trunk 
70cm diameter, sometimes ramified from the base. Bark of trunk platanoid. Young 
branches pubescent, adult ones with brownish gray bark and with numerous 
lenticels. Leaves of variable form and size, sometimes on the same branches. 
Adult leaves have limb that are more or less oval, oval-oblong, obtuse or 
rounded and sometimes emarginated at the tip, cuneiform to round at the base. 
Flowers hermaphrodite or sometimes only male flowers present that are solitary 
in fascicles. Pedicles 4-8mm long, glabrous. Petals 1-3, sometimes absent. Fruit 
is bacciform, spherical, 2-3cm diameters at maturity.  | 
17.   | FAMILY: 
HERNANDIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Hernandia nymphaeifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
blanc STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Big tree 
reaching 10-20m high, bark smooth, pale pinkish brown. 
Leaves with petiole 1-5cm above at the base of limb which is 5-17cm long, 
glabrous, reddish limb oval, pointed or obtuse at the tip, rounded or rarely 
twisted at the base, thin coriaceous, glabrous. Inflorescence is in thyrsus, 
multiflore and ramified. Male flowers are ‘3-mere’. Female flowers are ‘4-mere’. 
Drupe black, ellipsoidal, armed at the tip of an obtuse hump.  | 
18.   | FAMILY: 
ICACINACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Apodytes dimidiata COMMON NAME: Bois bleu; 
Bois Marie STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching a height of 10 cm. Flowers are minute and white with fragrance. Fruit 
small changing into a dark purple colour when ripe. Found in forest of middle to 
high altitude.  | 
19.   | FAMILY: 
LABIATAE  | 
(i)  |  SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Plectranthus madagascariensis COMMON NAME: Baume du 
perou STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A perennial 
herb, with a procumbent rootstock, from which issue many spreading or erect 
densely pilose stems 1-2 feet long. Leaves are petioled, roundish, crenate, 
thick, densely pilose, ½ - 1 inch long. Flowers: Raceme, 3-6 in. long of many 
distant, dense whorls of 10-12 flowers each, bracteated, by lanceolate, minute 
leaves, pedicels very short  | 
20.   | FAMILY: 
LAURACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ocotea 
laevigata COMMON NAME: Bois de 
canelle blanc STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching very big in height. Young parts and siblings 
vegetatives and inflorescence are glabrous. Twigs gray or brown, more slender 
than those of Ocotea mascarena . leaves with petiole 1-2.5cm long, quite hard, limb elliptical 
to subcircular, pointed to obtuse at the tip, cuneiform to rounded at the base, 
coriaceous. Inflorescence in bundles, glabrous, 1-2cm long. Flowers with 
glabrous receptacles and tepals. Ripe fruit not seen.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ocotea 
lancilimba COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A tree or 
shrub with twigs glabrous, bearing very small lenticels. Leaves have petiole 
quite slender, 1-1.5cm long, limb strictly elliptical, 
acuminate at the tip, pointed at the base, coriaceous and glabrous. Bundles 
axillary associated with less distinct vegetative siblings. Pedicels slender, 
3.5mm long. Flowers with obconical receptacle, 1mm high. Ripe fruit not 
seen.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ocotea 
mascarena COMMON NAME: Bois de 
canelle blanc STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching at times very big; twigs are gray or brown. Leaves with petiole thick 
and large, 1-2cm long, limb strictly oval, elliptical 
to oval or oboval, pointed or rounded at the tip, cuneiform or rounded base. 
Flowers seem to be in panicles, in bundles on young parts. Flowers with quite 
thick pedicels, 1-3mm long. Fruit 3.5cm long, oblong  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ocotea 
obtusata COMMON NAME: Bois de 
canelle blanc; Bois de canelle ruge STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub or tree of 15m high in Reunion, 6-9m in Mauritius, twigs brown or gray. Young parts, inflorescence 
and siblings vegetative. Leaves with petiole 1-2cm long, limb oboval or 
elliptical to subcircular, rounded at the tip, twisted at the base. Juvenile 
leaves strictly oval . inflorescence in bundles on young parts and short. Pedicels 
slender, 3-5mm long. Flower white with small receptacle, obconical. Fruit 2.5cm 
long, ellipsoidal.  | 
21.   | FAMILY: 
LEEACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Leea 
guineensis COMMON NAME: Bois 
sureau; Bois boeuf STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION:DESCRIPTION: 
Shrub reaching the height of 2-10 metre. Bud is straight, less branched and 
rethread at the knot. Leaves are composite and grouped at the extremities of 
branches. Flowers are small on loose bunch and in the colour range coral red to 
orange. Indigenous. Found in forest and ravine and shady places. Used as 
antiseptic, detergent and as a cure for ulcer, wound and tambave.  | 
22.   | FAMILY: 
LILACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Astelia 
hemichryse COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: 
Petrin DESCRIPTION: Rhizotomous 
herb, +-cespiteuse. Leaves are linear, gradually attenuated at the tip, 
glabrous, with thin epidermal scales on the upper surface, and on the lower 
surface the scales are appressed, brownish, hairs are 
found at the base. Peduncle is 30-60cm long, densely covered with hairy 
scales. Inflorescence reaching 2cm long; male inflorescence is +- loose; female 
inflorescence is more dense. Flowers are sessile. Fruit is orange 
yellow.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Cordyline mauritiana COMMON NAME: Bois de 
chandelle STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: 
Mare-longue DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
bush, dioecious, totally glabrous, usually is an epiphyte having two types of 
roots, whereby one surrounds the host and the other creeping on the bark of the 
host and descending into the soil, do not form any trunk, with branches of 1-3cm 
in diameter. Leaves are spatulate, narrowly oboval, gradually reduced near the 
base and the tip is pointed. Small branches carry clusters of flowers that are 
white tinted with purple, very numerous. Fruit is black, +- spherical, 3-6mm in 
diameter.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Dracaena concinna COMMON NAME: Bois de 
chandelle STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Gunner's 
Quoin DESCRIPTION: Bush of 
3-4m high, with big trunk, +- conical; bark is rough, grayish brown. Leaves are 
yellowish green, grouped at the top of the branches, sessile, linear-elliptical, 
acuminate, gradually reduced at the base, red 
margin. Inflorescence 30-40cm long, straight, hardy, ramified, with numerous 
flowers. Flowers are 2.5mm long. Fruit is obovoid to globose.  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Lomatophyllum purpureum COMMON NAME: Mazambron 
marron; mazambron STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: 
Yemen DESCRIPTION: Plant which 
is bushy. Bud is simple, slender and thin, reaching 3m high, 7-10cm in diameter 
at the base. Leaves are in terminal rosette, attenuated at the tip, dark green, 
washed with brown, fleshy, with margin narrowly bordered with pink or red, 
short, close near the base, well spaced near the top. Peduncle of 20-30cm 
long. Panicule of several up to10 bunch. Fruit is a berry of 2cm in diameter, 
subglobose.  | 
23.   | FAMILY: 
LINACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Hugonia 
serrata COMMON NAME: Liane a 
crochets STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A woody 
climber, with branchlets and sepals densely clothed with bright brown silky 
hairs. Leaves are short-petioled, obovate-oblong, cumeate at the base, 3-4 in. 
long, obtuse or acute, glabrous, except tufts of hairs in the axils of the main 
veins beneath; stipules lanceolate, deciduous. Flowers: Corymbs closely 
many-flowered. Corolla having bright yellow petals. Type of fruits: Drupe the 
size of a large pea, brown, pulpy.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Hugonia 
tomentosa COMMON NAME: Liane a 
crochets STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: General 
habit, tendrills, inflorescence and flower-structure just as in 
H.serrata. Leaves are 4-6 inches long, broader, obtuse or cuspidate, entire or 
obscurely crenulate, persistently clothed all over below and thinly at first 
above with brown silky pubescence. Type of fruits: Drupe the size of a 
cherry.  | 
24.   | FAMILY: 
LOGANIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Geniostoma angustifolium COMMON NAME: Bois de 
piment; bois cassant STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Geniostoma pedunculatum COMMON NAME: Bois 
piment STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched low shrub, with very slender shortly pilose branchlets. Leaves are 
distinctly petioled, obovate-cuneate, membraneous, obtuse, glabrous, ½ -3/4 in. 
long. Flowers are up to 6 in axillary fascicular, rarely with a common 
peduncled. Corolla: 1/12 in. long and as broad when expanded. Capsule fusiform, 
¼ -1/3 in. long.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Geniostoma sp. COMMON NAME: Bois de 
piment; bois cassant STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Nuxia 
verticillata COMMON NAME: Bois 
maigre STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A glabrous 
shrub or low tree, with moderately stout rather angular branches. Leaves with 
distinctly petioled, oblong, subcoriaceous, 3-5 in. long, subacute,cuneate at the base. Flowers are borne in spaced clusters on 
the branches of a very compound panicle a span long and broas, the lower 
branches of which are subtended by large leaves. Types of fruit: capsule a 
little longer than the persistent calyx.  | 
25.   | FAMILY: 
LORANTHACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Bakerella hoyifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
fier STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Branches 
pale gray, commonly with well developed lenticels. Leaves opposed, sometimes 
alternate, petiole 4-12mm long, limb oboval or oval – elliptical, obtuse, 
rounded at the tip, cuneiform at the base,. Inflorescence in axillary ombelles, 
subsessile, 2-5 flowers, solitary, peticels 4mm long.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Korthalsella opuntia COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: Tiges 15cm 
or more in length, the principal one having till 15 nodes  | 
26.   | FAMILY: 
LYTHRACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Nesaea 
triflora COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A slender 
annual, glabrous throughout, branched at the base, with quandrangular stems a 
foot long. Leaves are nearly sessile, oblong or lanceolate, an inch 
long. Flowers are 3 together in peduncled cymes from the axils of the leaves, 
subtended by a pair of lanceolate bracts. Types of fruit: capsule round, 
fragile, immersed in the calyx-tube.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pemphis 
acidula COMMON NAME: Bois 
matelot STATUS: Not 
threatened LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched shrub, 2-4 feet high, with terete branchlets. Leaves are crowded, 
short-petioled,oblong or lanceolate, ½ - 1 in. long, 
subcoriaceous, 1-nerved, rather silky. Flowers are solitary, from the axils of 
the leaves, on short hairy pedicels. Corolla: Petals white, crumpled, 
obovate-unguiculate, as long as the calyx, deciduous. Capsule crustaceous, 
fragile, as large as the calyx-tube.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tetrataxis salicifolia COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: Cascade 
500ft DESCRIPTION: A shrub, 
glabrous in all its parts, with quadrangular branches. Leaves are opposite, 
short-petioled, ovate-lanceolate, acute, 2-3 in. long, rigidly subcoriaceous, 
penninerved. Flowers: 1-3 on erect axillary peduncles an inch long, with a pair 
of linear-oblong deciduous bracteoles to each.  | 
27.   | FAMILY: 
MALVACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Urena 
lobata COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Unknown LOCATION: Le 
Pouce DESCRIPTION: A strong 
much-branched erect shrubby herb, with short pilose young branches. Leaves are 
short-petioled, 3-4 in. broad and long, firm, pale green and finely pilose 
beneath, inciso-crenate, shallowly, palmately 3-5-lobed in the upper half. 
Pedicels very short; bracteoles linear, exceeding the calyx.  | 
28.   | FAMILY: 
MELASTOMATACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Memecylon cordatum COMMON NAME: Bois bleu; 
Bois de Mays STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched shrub, with slender terete branchlets. Leaves are sessile, rigidly 
coriaceous, shining penninerved, 3-6 in. long, acute or subobtuse, cordate at 
the base, the basal lobes sometimes imbricating. Flowers are borne in distinctly 
peduncled cymes from the swollen nodes. Corolla: Petals deltoid, as long as the 
calyx.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Memecylon myrtiforme COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Vulnerable LOCATION: 
Cabinet DESCRIPTION: It differs 
from M. ovatifolium by its cylindrical branches and by its leaves, which are in 
general smaller and small fruit, about 7mm in diameter.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Memecylon ovatifolium COMMON NAME: Bois 
canne STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A shrub 
reaching 4m or more high, glabrous, branches 4angled 
bulged at the node. Leaves have reddish petiole of 2-3mm long, limb coriaceous, 
edges very thick, oval-to-oval oblong. Obtuse at the tip, rounded to 
sub-cuneiform at the base. Flowers solitary or grouped at the nodes in numerous 
peduncle cymes. Peduncles have 1-5 flowers, 1-5mm in length, associated with a 
pair of bract leaves at the top. Petals white, deltoid, 2,5mm long. Fruit 
globose, 9mm in diameter, yellow at maturity.  | 
29.  | FAMILY: 
MELIACEAE  | 
(i)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
casimiriana COMMON NAME: Bois 
quivi STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: Bras 
d'eau DESCRIPTION: Indigenous 
small tree. Found in dry region. Distinguished by its changing foliage which can 
be entire, incised, lobed and pinatifid.  | 
 (ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
decandra COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:
   | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
laciniata COMMON NAME: Bois 
balais STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
oppositifolia COMMON NAME: Bois café, 
Bois café marron, Bois quivi STATUS: 
Rare LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(v)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
ovata COMMON NAME: Bois 
quivi STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(vi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
rigida COMMON NAME: Bois café, 
Bois café marron STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION: A bush or 
tree glabrous throughout. Leaves are alternate, short-petioled, entire, firm, 
obtuse or acute, 4-6 in. long, penninerved. Flowers are found in sessile 
fascicles from nodes of branches or old wood. Corolla: Tubular, at first silky 
on outside.  | 
(vii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Turraea 
trichopoda COMMON 
NAME: STATUS: 
Endangered LOCATION: DESCRIPTION:  | 
30.  | FAMILY: 
MONIMIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Monimia 
ovalifolia COMMON NAME: 
Mapou LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A low tree, 
with thinly pilosed, terete branchlets. Leaves are opposite, short-petioled, 
obovate, with a cuneate base, very coriaceous pale green and rough with raised 
points on the upper surface, clothed with thin whitish lepidote tomentum below. 
Male flowers not seen. Female flowers 3-10 together, on very short pedicels, in 
peduncle umbels or cymes.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa amplifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: 
Yemen STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Branchlets 
stout, glabrous, terete. Leaves are alternate, on very short, channeled 
petioles, oblong, cuneate at the base, deltoid or rounded with a cusp at the 
apex, ½-1 foot long, subcoriaceous, with distinct main veins and visible 
intermediate reticulate venules. Flowers are solitary on short pedicels from the 
axils of the leaves. Fruits are conical, crowded, ½ an in. long.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa cocottensis COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: Mt 
Cocotte STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa cordifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa ficus COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour, Pot de chambe jacot LOCATION: Mt 
Lion STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa peltata COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: Corps de 
garde STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Branchlets 
slender, glabrous, terete. Leaves are opposite or alternate, obovate or oblong, 
obtuse or sub acute, deltoid at the base, 1-2 in. long, pale green, with only 
the fine main veins distinctly visible. Flowers are solitary from the nodes on 
the branchlets on pedicels nder an in. long. Male perianth expanded while female 
perianth unexpanded.  | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa quadrifida COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour, Pomme de singe LOCATION: 
Yemen STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A tree 
20-30 feet high, slender terete glabrous branchlets. Leaves are opposite or 
casually sub-alternate; blade obovate, obtuse, cuneate at the base, 2-4 in. 
long, sub-coriaceous, deep green above, paler green beneath with fine main vein. 
Flowers are dioecious, varying from solitary in the axils of the leaves to 10 or 
12 in a raceme, ½ a foot long, rarely in cymes at the end of leafy branchlets. 
Pedicels shorter or not much longer than the flowers  | 
(viii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa sieberi COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: Brise 
fer STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: Known only 
by the male inflorescence, which forms a peduncle deltoid panicle nearly a foot 
long, with a few spreading branches, which is like the rachis. Flowers have 
perianth that is coriaceous, ½-5/8 in. long, splitting down beyond the middle 
into four spreading lanceolate-deltoid lobes.  | 
(ix)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tambourissa tetragona COMMON NAME: Bois 
tambour LOCATION: Mt 
Cocotte STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Branchlets 
quite glabrous, tetragonous, compressed and dilated at the top. Leaves are 
opposite, lanceolate or narrow oblong, shortly pointed, narrows to the base, 
shortly petioled, with obscure venation. Male flowers in dense subspicate 
racemes.  | 
31.  | FAMILY: 
MORACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ficus 
laterifolia COMMON NAME: Figuier 
blanc LOCATION: Curepipe 
nursery STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Terrestrial 
tree reaching 12m high. Branches foliated, thick by 1.5-4mm, glabrous. Leaves 
with limb oval to oblong, pointed at the tip, sub-twisted to rounded at the base. Inflorescence is solitary or sometimes 
in pairs, peduncle 1-5mm long with firm minute hairs.  | 
32.  | FAMILY: 
MYCTAGINACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pisonia 
grandis COMMON NAME: Bois 
mapou LOCATION: Morne seche; 
cabinet STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:        | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pisonia 
costata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A tree 
reaching a height of 30-40 feet, with stout unarmed corky branchlets. Leaves are 
crowded at the end of the branchlets, petiole 1-11/2 in. long. Male corymbs are 
2-3 in. broad, very dense, and with brown-pubescent branchlets. Pedicels may be 
absent or very small.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pisonia 
lanceolata COMMON NAME: 
Mapou LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:
   | 
33.  | FAMILY: 
MYOPORACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Myoporum mauritianum COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched glabrous gland-dotted shrub with viscose branchlets. Leaves are 
crowded towards the end of the branchlets, sub-coriaceous, lanceolate, nearly 
sessile, 2 in. long, acute, narrowed from the middle, entire or finely serrated. 
Flowers are 1-2 together in the axils of each leaf, on pedicels. Corolla 
campanulate, conspicuously gland-dotted; lobes round. Drupes are the size of a 
small pea.  | 
34.  | FAMILY: 
MYRSINACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
balfouriana COMMON NAME: Bois 
papaye LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 6m high, with trunk of about 20cm in diameter. Bark brown and rough, 
reddish inside. Twigs are thick, with enlarged base. Leaves are generally 
grouped on top of the twigs, with hardy petiole, 5-12mm long, red; lamina with 
red midrib beneath and red margin, a bit revoluted, heterophyllous, elliptical, 
obtuse or rounded, rarely pointed on the tip, glabrous. Inflorescence axillary, 
borne among the bunch of terminal leaves, 20-50 flowers. Fruit globose, slightly 
depressed on top, 10-13mm in diameter.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
crassa COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Thick twigs 
with bark+-greyish white; young parts have short hairs, reddish, +-dense. Leaves 
with petiole always present and distinct from the decurrent base of the lamina, 
5-10mm long, lamina glabrous, coriaceous, elliptical to oboval, and obtuse on 
top. Inflorescences paniculees, very short, 2-3cm long, with very short hairs, 
reddish dense; flowers inserted along the whole length of the cyme of the 
inflorescence, with hardy pedicels. Fruit about 4mm in diameter, covered with 
very small hairs.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
insularis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
tuft, straight reaching 7m high, often flowering when still young. Leaves with 
petiole +- flattened, 5-10mm long. The lamina is oboval, with rounded or obtuse 
tip, glabrous, with flattened margin or slightly turns up. Inflorescence is 
axillary, 2-7cm long. Bough 8-10, each carrying up to 8 flowers. Fruit reaching 
7mm in diameter.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
multiflora COMMON NAME: Bois 
nacre LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
small tree. Twigs are glabrous. Leaves are grouped at the extremity of the twigs 
with petiole; lamina is elliptical-oboval, pointed or obtuse, and 
glabrous. Inflorescence in axillary’s cluster, carrying a maximum of 50 
flowers. Fruit, 4-5mm in diameter when dry, blackish, glabrous, finely 
grooved.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
platyphylla COMMON NAME: Bois 
nacre LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: 
Shrub. Leaves are sessile or with hardy petiole, 5mm long or more,; lamina is elliptical or oboval, pointed or more often 
obtuse, coriaceous when dry and glabrous. Axillary inflorescence, borne on the 
leafy part of the bough, in a long cluster, ramified with about 20 boughs each 
carrying about 15 pink whitish flowers; peduncle and rachis, +- 
crossed.  | 
(vi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
reticulata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small tree, 
little or sometimes not ramified, slender and thin, reaching 3-4m high. Leaves 
are sessile with hardy petiole, 1cm long; lamina, olong-elliptical, poited or 
obtuse at the tip, coriaceous, glabrous with either flat margin or revoluted 
margin. Inflorescence axillary, borne among the leaves, hanging, 30-50cm long, 
in ramified clusters, about 20 branches quite distant, with no flower in the 
half basal part, carrying each 10 pinkish flowers in the other half. Fruit 
unknown.  | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Badula 
…….. COMMON NAME: Bois 
nacre LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
35.  | FAMILY: 
MYRTACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
bojerie COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: A creeping 
shrub with ultimate branchlet, angular with wrinkled drab bark. Leaves are 
short-petioled, oblong, 1-11/2 foot long, 4-5 in. broad at the middle, acute, 
cuneate or rounded at the base, coriaceous, with copious raised erecto-patent 
venules meeting in a prominent intramarginal vein. Flowers are in cymes, 
few-flowered, sessile, lateral, sometimes copiously branched, and bearing lonely 
rudimentary flowers; pedicels with a pair of bracteoles near the top. Petals are 
quite free.  | 
(ii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
hastilis COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: Bras 
d'eau STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A shrub or 
small tree with rounded branches, puberulent at the juvenile stage and pale gray 
in colour. Leaves have petiole 1-3mm long, glabrous, limbe oboval to elliptical, 
obtuse to point at the tip, cuneiform at the base, glabrous, and coriaceous. 
Flowers solitary. Flower season March – June.  | 
(iii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
lucida COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub or small bushy tree, reaching 4m in height; bark platanoid, black, 
grey/pinkish in colour; branches puberulentes/ tomentose in the juveniles, 
glabrous, sometimes pinkish. Leaves with petiole 2-10 mm long, puberulent in the 
juveniles, finally glabrous, and sometimes reddish; limb of adult leaves oval, 
largely elliptical to sub circular. Flowers are solitary. Floral bud is 
piriform, reddish green. Flower disc 6-8mm in diameter, tomentose, pink. 
Berry globose to elliptical, 2-2,5cm long, +_ glabrous, 
8mm in diameter. Flowering season is January – April.   | 
(iv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
orbiculata COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A 
very branched shrub or small tree reaching a height of 
3-6m, branches are red and puberulent at the juvenile stage, being glabrous in 
later stage. Leaves have petiole 1-3mm long, limb of young leaves oblong, 
strictly oboval or strictly elliptical, limb of adult leaves oval, elliptical or 
+_ circular, obtuse at the tip and twisted at the base, dark green on the upper 
side, pale grayish green below, generally coriaceous. Flowers solitary, 
generally found in 1-2 pairs present on the basal region of a foliated branch. 
Flowering bud piriform. Petals sub circular, 4-5mm long, white. Flowering disc 
tomentose, 5mm in diameter. Berry globose, 10mm in 
diameter.  | 
(v)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
pollicina COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A shrubby 
tree reaching 4m high with pale reddish brown bark, which is easily detached in 
thin plaque. Branches are rounded, grayish brown, glabrous. Leaves having 
petiole 1-3mm long, glabrous, limb oboval to elliptical, cuneiform at the base, 
glabrous, radiant green above, pale grayish green below, finely coriaceous to 
thick and rigid. Flowers solitary and found on defoliated branches, commonly 
sessile, with peduncle reaching 4mm high. Flowering bud puberulant, grayish. 
Petals +_ circular, about 2,5mm long,white.
   | 
(vi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
sieberi COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A bushy 
shrub reaching the height of 4m, bark platanoid, branches rounded, ferruginous to tomentose. Leaves with petiole 3-8mm 
long, limb oboval to elliptical, obtuse at the tip, cuneiform or obtuse at the 
base, ferruginous to yellowish above, commonly have very small brownish hairs, 
coriaceous. Flowers solitary, 1-4 in pairs situated at the basal region of 
foliated branches. Flower bud turbinate, flower disc 5-6mm diameter, tomentose. 
Berry ellipsoid, 10mm long, 6-7mm in diameter.  | 
(vii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
tinifolia COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A 
bushy shrub or small tree reaching 6-7 m high, trunk 20-30cm in diameter, bark 
pale brown, detached in plaque, branches tomentose to brownish. Leaves having 
petiole 10-25mm long, tomentose, limb largely elliptical or oval to obtuse or 
pointed at the tip, cuneiform or obtuse at the base. Flowers solitary, sometimes 
2-3 pairs disposed in racemes on foliated branches, peduncles bear rarely 3 
flowers and so the central flower is sessile, the lateral ones have peduncles 
4-6mm. Flower bud turbinate. Flower disc 10 mm in diameter, tomentose, becoming 
concave in the fruit. Berry globose or ellipsoid, 
10-20mm long, tomentose, becoming fragile when when dry. Flower season August – January  | 
(viii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Eugenia 
vaughanii COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: Small 
tree reaching 4m high; smooth bark, pinkish and grey; twigs tomentose or 
glabrous; lamina subcircular, obtuse at the tip, rounded at the base, sober 
green, shiny above, yellowish green beneath, criaceous. Median vein prominent 
beneath. Flowers in axil of the leaves or in pairs or solitary near the 
nodes. Petals are oboval, white, with margin tomentose. Berry ellipsoid.  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Monimiastrum acunsepalum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub reaching 2m high, branches brownish gray, puberulent, rounded or weakly 
4-gones at the base of nodes. Leaves having petiole 3-5mm long, thich by 2-3mm, 
puberulent, limb sub circular and elliptical, obtuse or sometimes pointed at the 
tip, rounded at the base, coriaceous and rigid, limb of yellow to yellowish 
green flowers have short grayish hairs or minute pinkish hairs. Flowers solitary 
on basal region of foliated leaves, sessile, with peduncle reaching 4mm in 
height and +_ flat. Flower bud fusiform. Petals subcircular, 3.5-4.5mm long, 
white crème, inserted at the top of floral tube. Flower disc tomentose. 
Berry ellipsoid, pale brownish gray in colour. Flower 
season October – December.  | 
(x)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Monimiastrum fasciculatum COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: Small tree, 
branches whitish, rounded or weakly 4-gones at the base of nodes. Leaves having 
petiole of 5-10mm long, thick by 1.5-2mm, glabrous or puberulent, limb 
elliptical or oval to elliptical, obtuse or pointed at the tip, obtuse a the 
base, glabrous, finely coriaceous. Flowers sessile or with peduncle reaching 2mm 
in length, grouped by 3-6 on short protuberances. Flower bud piriform, dense 
tomentose, formed by grayish or pinkish hairs. Petals are subcircular, 4-5mm in 
diameter. Flower disc tomentose. Berry globose, 2cm in diameter.  | 
(xi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Monimiastrum globosum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Small 
tree, straight and slender, reaching 5m high, bark grayish brown, branches 
puberulent or glabrous. Leaves having petiole 2-5mm long, glabrous or 
puberulent, limb elliptical, sub circular or oval to elliptical, obtuse at the 
tip, obtuse or +_ truncate at the base, coriaceous. Flower sessile, rarely with 
peduncle reaching 2mm in length, grouped in 2-5 on short protuberances. Flower 
bud globose to obovate, rounded at the tip. Petals are 
sub circular, white. Flower disc tomentose. Berry ellipsoidal or globose, 1-2.5mm diameter, reddish tomentum. Flower season 
October – November and February – March.  | 
(xii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Monimiastrum pixidatum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 2.50m high, branches brownish gray, puberulent at the juvenile stage. 
Leaves having petiole 2-7mm, puberulent, limb elliptical to sub circular, obtuse 
at the tip like at the base, glabrous, sub coriaceous and with margin commonly 
revolute. Flowers solitary inserted by 1-2 pairs, peduncles 5-25mm long, 
puberulent. Flower bud is piriform, pale yellowish green. Petals are sub 
circular, 3-4mm diameter. Disc tomentose. Fruit not 
known.  | 
(xiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Monimiastrum psidioideum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
slender or bushy reaching 2m high, branches grayish brown, puberulant at the 
juvenile stage. Leaves having petiole 2-5mm long, +_ glabrous, limb elliptical, 
obtuse or pointed at the tip, obtuse at the base, coriaceous. Flowers solitary, 
peduncle 2-12mm long, thick by 1-1.5mm. Flower bud piriform, the tip is round. 
Petals subcircular, 3-4mm in diameter, white, inserted at the top of the floral 
tube. Flower disc tomentose. Berry globose or ellipsoidal, reaching 3cm in 
length smooth glabrous, olive green in colour, pale yellow pulp. Flower season 
March – May. Fruit in July.  | 
(xiv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium balfourii COMMON NAME: Bois de 
clous LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: A shrub, 
glabrous, reaching 5m high, twigs rounded, bark whitish. Leaves with petiole 
10-15mm long, limb oblong or strictly oval, pointed at the tip, cuneiform to 
obtuse at the base, sub coriaceous. Inflorescence terminal, in thyrsus of 15-25 
flowers, 6-10cm long, branches 4-gones. Flowers ‘4-mere’, grouped in 3 at the 
top of branches. Terminal flowers have pseudo-pedicel 2-3mm long and lateral 
ones are sessile. Flower bud turbinate. Petal +_circular, free, 3mm in diameter white. Fruit 
turbinate.  | 
(xv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium commersonii COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: Brise fer; 
Perrier STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub reaching 4m high, glabrous, sometimes creeping and branches low, bark 
reddish brown, twigs rounded, brownish. Leaves with petiole 2-4mm long, limb 
oval or oval elliptical, pointed to acuminer at the tip, and obtuse or sub - 
twisted at the base, coriaceous. Inflorescence is cauliflores, ramiflore, 
peduncles slender, 1-2.5cm long, generally pendulous. 
Flowers are ‘4-mere’, flower bud turbinate, pinkish green. Petals grouped 
loosely between them, forming a calytre of 6-7mm diameter, pink. Disc dark 
yellow orange. Berry is globose to 
ellipsoid, purple or red in colour, pendulous with flesh mauve in colour. Flower 
season March – May.  | 
(xvi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium contractum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub or tree, glabrous, reaching a height of 10m, bark pinkish brown, thin, 
plaques are not detachable, twigs rounded. Leaves with 5mm long, 3-4mm thick, 
limb largely oboval, elliptical or subcircular, obtuse or pointed at the tip, 
obtuse or sometimes twisted at the base, coriaceous, dark green above, grayish 
green below. Inflorescence terminal, formed by thyrsus, disposed in panicles, 
3-5cm long, branches reaching 3-4mm in thickness. 
Flowers ‘4-mere’ inserted at the top of branches in inflorescence, sessile, 
grouped in 3. Flowers bud piriform to conical, white to reddish, exterior of 
petals and floral tube bear orange glands, spherical. Petals attached loosely 
forming a calyptre of 3-4mm, pink or white. Disc pale green. Berry purple reaching 2cm diameter. Fruit season 
January to March.  | 
(xvii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium coriaceum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A small 
shrub, very branch, 1-1.5m high, to small tree with spreading crown and with 
hard trunk, 6-7m high, glabrous. Twigs tetragonal, grayish. Leaves with 
coriaceous limb, radiant above, dull below, oboval to elliptical, rounded at the 
tip, cuneiform to +_ rounded at the base. Inflorescence reddish, in thyrsus, 
pauci-pluriflores, 1.5-3cm long, peduncles 3-6mm long, flowers 2-3 at the top of 
branches, rarely in short raceme. Flower bud obconical to +_claviform, 2.5 – 4 
mm long. Flowers 4-mere. Petal calyptre, oval to subcircular. Fruit globose 
becoming black purple at maturity. Flower season January to February. Fruit 
April (young) to September.  | 
(xix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium latifolum (scandens) COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A 
shrub, glabrous with slender branches, reaching 5m high, sometimes creeping. 
Bark smooth, pinkish gray, do not detached, twigs rounded. Leaves with petiole 
1-5mm long, 4mm thick, sometimes orange, limb largely oboval, oblong or sub 
circular, obtuse at the tip, obtuse to sub twisted at the base, coriaceous, dark 
green above, lighter green below. Inflorescence generally axillary formed in 
thyrsus, multiflore, 7-12cm long, sometimes disposed in panicles. Flowers 
4-mere, sessile, grouped in 3-9 at the top of branches of inflorescence. Flower 
bud is piriform to turbinate. Petals circular, free, 1-1.5mm long, pinkish to 
white. Berry 
globose, 2.2cm diameter. Flower season 
April – May.  | 
(xx)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium mamillatum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A shrub 
reaching 3.4m high, weakly ramified, trunk 4-10cm diameter sometimes divided at 
the base in 2 ascending branch, having at the base protuberances florifere, 
rounded, numerous, twigs slender, a little flat, grayish. Branches cylindrical, grayish to brownish. 
Inflorescence uniflore, grouped in 2-30 on linear mamelons at the base of trunk. 
Peduncles 5-8mm long. Flowers ‘4-mere’. Flower bud is ob-conical. Fruit 
greenish, +_pink to +_ reddish crowded by the green 
sepals.  | 
(xxi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium mauritianum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme a grande feuilles LOCATION: Gaulette 
seree STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Tree 
glabrous reaching the height of 9m, bark grayish brown, cracked, twigs rounded. 
Leaves grouped at the top of branches, sessile, petiole short and thick, 3mm in 
diameter, limb largely oboval, elliptical or oblong, pointer or obtuse at the 
tip, twisted at the base, coriaceous or rigid, dark green above, grayish green 
below. Inflorescence in raceme or thyrsus, pauciflore, reaching 2cm in length, 
sometimes axillary, forming a calyptre of 6-9mm in diameter, pink in colour, 
disc yellowish. Berry is ellipsoidal, 
red-purple. Flower season September – January.  | 
(xxii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium petrinense COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 1-2m high or small tree with crowned branches reaching 5m high, trunk 
15cm diameter, glabrous, twigs flattened, +_ tetragonal, pale brown to grayish. 
Leaves pale olive green above, coriaceous, limb elliptical or sub circular, 
rounded at the tip, rounded or cuneiform at the base, interior side is smooth. 
Inflorescence in thyrsus pluriflore, flowers are in 
grouped of 2-3 or sometimes 6-7 at the top of branches. Flower bud is obconical 
or a little claviform, 4-5mm long. Flowers 4-mere. Petals greenish to +_ purple 
sub circular to largely oboval. Fruit sub spherical, black purple to dark violet 
at maturity.  | 
(xxiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium populifolium COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small 
tree, glabrous, twigs rounded, hard, branches grayish brown or reddish brown. 
Leaves with petiole 10-14mm, limb oval to sub circular, pointed or obtuse at the 
tip, rounded or sometimes truncate to twisted at the 
base, finely coriaceous, dark green above, gray green below. Inflorescence 
terminal, formed by thyrsus reaching 7cm long, grouped by numerous flowers on 
hard branches. Flowers 4-mere, sessile, generally grouped in 3 at the top of 
branches. Flower bud turbinate. Petals circular, about 4mm long, 
solitary. Berry 
not found.  | 
(xxiv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium rampans COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
glabrous and creeping or small tree, twig straight, dark purple brown, branches 
grayish. Leaves with petiole reaching 2mm high, limb oval or oval to oblong, 
pointed at the tip, twisted at the base, coriaceous and with margin very 
revolute, dark green above, becoming dark purple brown below when dry. 
Inflorescence terminal and axillary, formed by thyrsus, 
loose, multiflowers, commonly inserted in panicles, reaching 17cm high. Flowers 
4-mere, sessile, in groups of 3 at the top of branches. Flower bud napiform, 
with a tinge of reddish purple. Petals are oboval, solitary, 1.5-2mm 
long. Berry 
not fond. Flower season August – 
January.  | 
(xxv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium vaughanii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
slender, high by 2,50m, or tree 20m high, trunk 40cm in diameter, twigs 
tetragon, reddish. Leaves have limb that is strictly oboval to elliptical, 
petiole 0.2 – 0.7cm long, relatively less thick. Inflorescence is in terminal, 
in thyrsus paniculiforms, 3-3.5cm long, 2cm diameter, reddish. Flowers ‘4-mere’. 
Flower bud turbinate, petals pink subcircular. Ripe fruit not seen.  | 
(xxvi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syzygium venosum COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub very 
ramified, or tree reaching 4m in height, glabrous, bark gray, smooth, branches 
hard, thick ness 5-10mm. Leaves +_ sessile, limb elliptical or oboval, truncate, 
obtuse at the tip, twisted at the base, radiant green above, pale green below, 
coriaceous and rigid. Inflorescence is in thyrsus or rarely in raceme, 9-30 
flowers, reaching 10cm in length. Flowers 4-mere, 3 at the top of branches, 
flowering bud conical or turbinate, dark reddish purple. Petals circular, 
pendulous, loosely attached to each other forming a pinkish calyptre. Disc 
yellowish. Berry ellipsoid, 2-2,5cm long, 1.2-1.5cm diameter, greenish red, 
fleshy. Flower season October – December.  | 
36.  | FAMILY: 
OLACACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Olax 
psittacorum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
perroquet LOCATION: Morne 
seche; Found in dense forest of Quartier Militare and Bois Cherie. STATUS: 
Endangered; Endemic to Reunion and Mauritius. DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
with small fragrant white flowers. Fruit ligneous or woody and reddish in 
colour.  | 
37.  | FAMILY: 
OLEACEA  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chionanthus ayresii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small tree; 
grey bark; twigs are cylindrical, glabrous or young parts are pubescent. Leaves 
with petiole 2-5mm long, glabrous; lamina oboval or subcircular, sometimes 
elliptical, obtuse at the tip, rounded at the base, coriaceous, shiniy on the 
upper surface. Inflorescence axillary, pauciflores, 3-8mm long. Peduncle 
tetragonal; flowers are sessile and petals are free. Fruit is 
ellipsoidal.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chionanthus boutonii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 5m high; bark is white; twigs are cylindrical, glabrous. Leaves with 
petiole 5-10mm, hardy, glabrous. Blade is oboval or elliptical, obtuse and 
cuspidate at the tip, coriaceous, shiny on the upper surface. Inflorescence, 2-5 
times ramified. Flowers are sessile but the terminal flowers can be mobile; 
petals are oblong, 2.5-3mm long, coherent in pairs. Fruit is ovoid or 
elliptical, hexagonal.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chionanthus broomeana COMMON NAME: Bois 
sandal; Bois santal LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching 18m high. The bark is dark grey; twigs lenicellees. Leaves with petiole 
5-20mm long, glabrous or pubescent; lamina elliptical, narrowly oboval, obtuse, 
pointed at the tip, coriaceous, cartace ou herbace when young, glabrous, shiny 
on the upper surface, ponctue on the lower surface. Petals 3-4.5mm long, oblong, 
free or coherent at the base by pairs. Fruit is ellipsoidal or ovoid, 6-8-gone, 
slate blue, thick pedicel.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Jasminum fluminense COMMON NAME: Jasmin du 
pays LOCATION: Found in low 
land forest STATUS: Rare; 
Indigenous DESCRIPTION: White 
flower. Indigenous. Found in low land forest Small shrub creeping, 
reaching 3m high; young and inflorescent parts are puberulent to 
tomentose. Leaves trifoliolees; folioles oval, heart-shaped, tronquees or 
rounded at the base, pointed or obtuse at the tip, +- glabrous; white corolla; 
lobes narrow, pointed, 10-15mm long. Fruit with ellipsoidal lobes, 3-6mm in 
diameter.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Olea 
europaea COMMON NAME: Olivier de 
Borubon LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
tree reaching 6m high. Leaves with petiole, 3-10mm long; lamina very narrowly 
oval or linearly-oval, rarely spatulate, pointed or obtuse at the tip, subcoriaceous , dark green and shiny on superior 
surface. Short inflorescence, axillary, 2-7cm long. Terminal flowers with short 
pedicle, lateral flowers are sessile white flowers. Fruit: drupe turning black 
or prune, subspherical or oval found in the forest of low 
altitude.   | 
38.  | FAMILY: 
PALMAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Acanthophoenix rubra COMMON NAME: Palmiste 
rouge; Palmiste epineux;Palmiste LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Palm 60 
feet high. Leaves are 6-12 feet long; petiole glabrous, 2-4 in. long, thickly 
covered with long brown – black spines; pinnate slightly glaucous beneath. 
Branches are stout, subtended by linear-lanceolate bracts. Flower spadix 2 ½ - 3 
½ feet long; peduncle 6-10 in. long, like the lower part of the branches, armed 
with straight spines. Fruits are globose, 1/3 – 3/8 in. diameter, with a 
prominent ridge extending from the stigma to the base.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Dictyosperma album COMMON NAME: Palmiste de 
L'ile Ronde LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Trunk 
reaching 20m high, 8-16cm in diameter, often enlarged at the base, brown 
grey. Leaves with sheath that have grey tomentose, 
white, brown. Tomentose on the upper surface. Inflorescence. Flowers are 
yellow-brown. Fruit is black or purple black, 2cm long.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Hyophorbe amaricaulis COMMON NAME: Curepipe 
botanical garden LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Palm 60 
feet high, with a bottle-shaped stem 15-24 in. diameter near the base, slightly 
diminishing upwards to the base of the leaf-sheaths, and there abruptly 
constricted. Leaf-sheath cylindrical; petiole 12-18 in long, somewhat trigonous, 
grooved on the face, pinnate in 40-60 pairs, lanceolate, acuminate, 18 in. long, 
2 in. broad, with the central and 1 lateral vein on each side prominent on the 
upper surface, and several secondary veins also prominent beneath, which are 
clothed towards the base with subrigid lanceolate scales. Flower spadix are in 
clustered branches; peduncle a foot long. Fruits are 
elliptic-oblong.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Hyophorbe lagenicaulis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: The trunk 
reaches a height of 5m or longer, very broad at the base, 70cm in diameter. 
Leaves are 4-6, the sheath is green and waxy-blue green, petiole 12-18cm long, 
scales are pale brown, pilose or tomentose. 
Inflorescence is 77cm long, 3 times branched. Flowers are 4-8, in linear groups. 
Fruits are ellipsoid, sometimes sub-globose, black or sometimes orange when 
mature and 2-2.5cm long.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Latania 
loddigestii COMMON NAME: Palmiste 
marron LOCATION: Ile 
Ronde STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: Palm 50 ft 
high. Leaves have petiole 3-41/2 ft long, tomentose, the margin entire in the 
mature, spiny in the young plant; the primary veins beneath slightly tomentose 
and tinged with red, especially in young plants. Flowers perianth 3/8 in. long; 
segments not fringed. Drupes are obovoid or pyriform, trigonous, 21/2 in. 
long.  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tectiphiala ferox COMMON NAME: Latanier 
bleu; Latanier de Maurice LOCATION: Gouly Pere; In 
highlands STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: The trunk 
reaches the height of 2m and 15cm in diameter, the juveniles having grayish 
black spines of 18cm long. Leaves are about 10, crowned, the sheath reaching 
80cm in length, with dark brown hairiness and flat, blackish spines, petiole 
about 20cm long. Inflorescence reaches a height of 30cm. The fruit is blue-black 
in colour, dark at maturity, fleshy and 11-12mm long.  | 
39.  | FAMILY: 
PANDANACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus barklyi COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree, 5-8 ft high, with slender decumbent stems and branches with adventitious 
roots from all parts. Leaves are 1-3 ft long, ¾ - 2 in broad, blade reduplicate 
on each side of the midrib, tapering to a long point, dark green above, 
glaucescent beneath, the margins and midrib armed throughout or at the base and 
tip only with short spines, green at first but turning red. Drupes are purple, 
compressed 11/2- 2 in long.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus carmichaelii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus conglomeratus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree, 12-15 ft high, with a slender trunk, semi-decumbent and sparingly 
branched. Leaves are 3-12 ft long, 2-5 in. broad, narrowed gradually to a point, 
pale green, with the midrib and edges armed with long white unequal ascending 
spines. Drupes are 1-11/2 in. long, slightly compressed.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus drupaceus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A low tree, 
about 12 ft high, with a light gray stem about 8 in. in diameter, which is at 
first decumbent and branches free. Leaves are firm, pale green, 3-6 ft long, 5-6 
in. broad, the thickened red margins armed with red closely-set strongly 
incurved spines from the middle to the tip; midrib very prominent, spiny at the 
tip.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus eydouxia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A 
flat-topped tree 20 ft high, with a slate coloured stem, 8-9 in. in diameter, 
with many short spiny knobs, the numerous branches ending in tufts of drooping 
leaves. Leaves are very firm in texture, tapering to a long point, dark green, 
glaucous, 5-7 ft long, 3-5 in. broad, the slightly thickened margins irregularly 
armed with red-tipped spines; midrib prominent on the upper surface, spiny above 
the middle.  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus glaucocephalus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION:  | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus heterocarpus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: An erect 
tree, about 20 ft high, with a light brown stem 5-7 in. in diameter, which 
branches freely so as to form a regular dome-like head, the tufts of leaves 
either erect or drooping. Leaves are firm, 1 ½ - 3 feet long, 1 ½ - 21/2 in. 
broad, pale or dark green often glaucent at the base. The pink edges armed 
throughout or except at the middle with very sharp red spines; midrib slightly 
tinged with red  | 
(viii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus incertus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus microcarpus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree or shrub with a light dun - coloured smooth stem 3-4 in. in diameter, 
branching freely at an acute angle. Leaves are thin, coriaceous, 1-2 ft long, 
dark green on the upper surface, slightly glaucous beneath, the margins armed 
throughout with short, sharp red spines; midrib spiny only at the base and tip. 
Drupes are purple with a slight bloom, orange at the base when 
ripe.  | 
(x)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus obsoletus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus palustris COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: An erect 
tree, about 20 ft high, with slate gray stem about 8 in. in diameter with short 
spiny knobs, not branching freely, with many aerial roots, the branches ending 
in tufts of drooping very persistent leaves. Leaves are firm in texture, 
tapering very gradually to a point, 41/2 to 6 ft. long, the margins armed, 
usually throughout with small sharp blacked-tipped spines; midrib prominent, 
spiny throughout  | 
(xii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus prostratus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus pyramidalis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A tree 30 
ft. high with a straight dark brown stem, 8-10 in. in diameter, with horizontal 
or slightly deflexed branches ending in drooping tufts of leaves. Leaves are 
thick, coriaceous 2-5 ft. long, 1-2 in. broad, tapering to a long point, dark 
green, slightly glaucent on both surfaces; margins red, armed throughout or 
except at the middle with short red-tipped spines; midrib prominent, spiny in 
the upper half.  | 
(xiv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus rigidifolius COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus sphaeroideus COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A low tree 
8-12 ft. high with a slender decumbent, light dun-coloured freely branching 
stem, the branches decumbent and aerial roots descending freely from all parts. 
Leaves are firm in texture 3-5 in. long, pale green, the edges irregularly armed 
with short reddish spines; midrib not very prominent, spiny towards the 
tip.  | 
(xvi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pandanus vandermeerschii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Ile 
Ronde STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A tree 
about 20 ft. high with a light-coloured stem 5-6 in. in diameter, branching 
freely, and branches often twisted. Leaves are stiff, sub-erect 2 ½ to 3 ft. 
long, very glaucous on both surfaces, the thickened red margins, armed 
throughout with a strong red pungent spines and the prominent red midrid also 
spiny from the base to the tip. Drupes fusiform.  | 
40.  | FAMILY: 
PITTOSPORACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pittosporum balfourii COMMON NAME: Bois 
becasse LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A shrub 
reaching 4m high, young parts very pubescent and more or less glabrescent. 
Leaves petioled and those of young specimen appears more longer and more 
straighter as compared to the adult ones, adult limb oboval or strictly oboval, 
generally obtuse, sometimes pointed or rounded at the base. Inflorescence is in 
panicles, having till 20 flowers, young pedicels finely 
puberulent, and at later stage glabrous. Fruit 4-7mm long. Male flowers 
only.  | 
41.  | FAMILY: 
RANUNCULACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Clematis mauritiana COMMON NAME: Vigne 
vierge LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A glabrous 
climbing shrub. Leaves are petioled; leaflets turnate, ovate, acute, stalked, 
and dentate. Flowers are 3-5 in. long, lax pedicels on axillary peduncles as 
long as the petiole.  | 
42.  | FAMILY: 
RHAMNACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Gouania 
leguatii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: DESCRIPTION:  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Gouania 
tiliifolia COMMON NAME: Liane 
charretiers LOCATION: 
Perrier STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A climbing 
shrub with young branches only and veins of the leaf below, rusty-pilose. Leaves 
have short petiole, cordate-ovate, 2-4 in. long. Flowers are in close raceme, 
2-4 in. long, with a densely pilose axis, expanded; petals, whitish, shorter 
than sepals. Capsule hard, naked, deeply triquetrous with thick 
wings.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Phylica 
nitida COMMON NAME: 
Bruyere LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub with 
bud more or less creeping with short, cone-shaped spur. Found on 
mountains  | 
43.  | FAMILY: 
RUBIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Antirhea bifurcata COMMON NAME: Bois 
goudron LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Shrub of 
1.2-4m high, with bud of 12-15cm in diameter; bark is platanoid, grayish; 
branches purple, dark black, rough. Leaves are often bright green, grouped on 
the top of the twigs; lamian is elliptical to oboval, rounded at the tip, 
cuneiform at the base, almost glabrous or small hairs. Inflorescence of 
3-40-flores; corolla is yellowish to bright yellow. Fruit is ellipsoid, 2.5mm in 
diameter, with thin flesh.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Bertiera bistipulata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: Small tree; 
branches pubescent, apressed. Leaf blade is elliptical, acuminate at the tip, 
cuneiform to subtruncate at the base, glabrous on both surface; petiole 1-1.6cm 
long. Inflorescence, a thyrsus formed with cymes, often ample, with pubescent 
fine or dense. Ripe fruit is not known.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Bertiera zaluzania COMMON NAME: Bois bleu; 
bois de raisins; bois maigre LOCATION: Mt 
Cocotte STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A low 
erect shrub with silky branchlets. Leaves are short-petioled, oblong, acute, 
subcoriaceous, distinctly penninerved, 4-6 in. long, glabrous above, obscurely 
silky below. Flowers are in peduncled, terminal drooping panicles, ½ foot long; 
cymes many, lax, 3-4 times dichotomously forked, with a flower sessile in each 
fork. Berry 
is dry, size of a small 
pea.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia boryana COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: Bassin 
blanc STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched glabrous shrub, 3-4 ft. high, with rather stout angular 
branchlets. Leaves are obovate-oblong, often turnate, 3-4 in. long, sub-acute with a deltoid base, petiole slender, 
1-11/2 in. long. Flowers are in a terminal corymbose panicle, 3-6 in. broad, 
usually fascicled, 3-6 together at the end of the branchlets. Drupes are oblong, 
¼ in. long, purple, not crowned by a cup.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia capitata COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: 
Plaine Champagne STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A glabrous 
shrub with rather stout terete branches. Leaves are short-petioled, 
obovate-oblong, 3-4 in. long, minutely cuspidate, sub-coriaceous, cuneately 
narrowed from the middle to the base turning black in drying. Flowers are 20-30 
in a dense globose, sessile, terminal head; pedicel, none. Drupes are oblong, ½ 
in. long, crowned by a deep cut.  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia coriacea COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: 
Petrin STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
of 1-2.5m high, with young twigs which are quite thick, no hairs; older twigs 
with grey bark. Leaves are opposite, with lamina elliptical, shortly acuminate 
at the tip, cuneiform at the base, glabrous, wholly coriaceous, margin 
revoluted, yellowish green and shiny when dry. Inflorescence is loose, with axes 
white to pink or red; peduncle 3cm long. Corolla is pink. Fruit is dark red, 
strictly ovoid.  | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia grandifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
bush of undergrowth; young parts becoming black when drying, older parts has 
bark of dark grey colour. Leaves opposite or in whorl of 3, with lamina 
elliptical, shortly acuminate at the tip, cuneiform at the base, glabrous; 
petiole 1-3cm. Flowers are sessile, in loose inflorescence, glabrous; peduncle 
white or reddish, 2-4cm long. Corolla is blue or pink on the outside, purple 
inside. Fruit is blackish, ellipsoid or oblong.  | 
(viii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia lanceolata COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Shrub of 
1.5-1.8m high; twigs easily broken with barkgreyish brown. Leaves opposite, with 
blade elliptical or oblong, shortly acuminate at the tip, cuneiform at the base, 
shiny, glabrous, smooth and uniform on the upper surface; petiole 
0.5-2cm. Inflorescence is loose, with white axes, flowers with distinct 
pedicels. Corolla is white. Fruit is subspherical-ellipsoidal, about 1cm in 
diameter.  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia petrinensis COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: Common 
in Petrin, Plaine Champagne. STATUS: Vulnerable, 
Endemic. DESCRIPTION: Very small 
shrub. Distinguished by its coral-pink inflorescence. Small shrub of 1.5m high; 
twigs are quite hardy, glabrous, with bark grayish, shiny. Leaves are opposite, 
subsessiles, yellowish green; lamina is narrowly oboval-cuneiform or oboval, 
coriaceous but thin, glabrous. Inflorescence is closely packed, trichotomous, 
and sessile. Corolla is pale greenish yellow, waxy. Fruit is dark blue green to 
black purple, sessile, oblong-ellipsoidal.  | 
(x)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Chassalia sp. COMMON NAME: Bois 
corail LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub, 
rarely small tree or herbs. Leaves are opposite or rarely in 3. Flowers are 
hermaphrodite, often small, as an inflorescence. Corolla is white, pink or 
purple, sometimes yellow inside. Fruit is fleshy, hemispherical, and 
dehiscent.  | 
(xi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Doricera trilocularis COMMON NAME: Bois 
chave-souris LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
small tree reaching5-9m high; trunk of 10-25cm in diameter; treetop like an 
umbrella; bark is grayish brown; branches are glabrous. Leaves are 
oblong-elliptical to elliptical, obtuse at the tip, cuneiform at the base, +- 
shiny on the upper surface, coriaceous, glabrous. Flowers in group of 4-8; 
corolla is white. Fruit is red, 7.5-11mm in diameter.  | 
(xii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Fernalia dicipiens COMMON NAME: Bois buis; 
Bois de buis LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Shrub of 
2-3m high, ramified. Leaf blade is elliptical, rounded to sub-pointed at the tip, cuneiform at the base, sometimes 
completely coriaceous; petiole 2-4mm long. Male and female flowers present. 
Fruit becomes purple when mature, ovoid or ellipsoid.  | 
(xiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Fernalia obovata COMMON NAME: Bois buis; 
Bois de buis LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub of 
1.2-3.6m high; bark is grayish brown; young twigs are pubescent. Leaf blade 
largely elliptical to almost circular, rounded at the tip, cuneiform at the 
base, +- glabrous; petiole 5mm long, with short pubescent. Male flowers with 
peduncle, +- nil. Female flower and fruit not found.  | 
(xiv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera calycina COMMON NAME: Bois la 
soupe LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
dwarf tree?, 0.9-1.2m high; twigs are glabrous. Leaf 
blade is elliptical to oblong-elliptical, acuminate at the tip, cuneiform at the 
base, coriaceous but thin, glabrous; petiole 1.7-3cm. Inflorescence corymbiform, 
20cm in width. Fruit is fusiform.  | 
(xv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera cuneifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Habit 
unknown; young twigs are glabrous. Leaf blade is oboval to oblong-cuneiform, 
truncate to largely rounded at the tip, cuneiform at 
the base, very coriaceous, petiole is 5mm long, orange yellow. Flowers with 
fragrance, in sessile inflorescence, subspherical, 2-4cm in diameter. Corolla is 
white, fleshy, finely puberulent on the exterior. Fruit 
is ellipsoidal.  | 
(xvi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera hirtiflora COMMON NAME: Bois de 
riviere LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:
   | 
(xvii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera longifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small short 
tree or shrub with little branching of 1.8-3m high; twigs are quite strong, 
straight, with bark pale brown. Leaf blade is big, elliptical-oblong to 
oblanceolate, shortly acuminate at the tip, narrowly cuneiform at the base, 
coriaceous, glabrous, dark green, shiny above and paler beneath; petiole 2-4cm 
long. Inflorescence, multiflores, peduncle 3cm long. Flowers with 
fragrance. Corolla is waxy white. Fruit is whitish, subspherical and smooth when 
fresh, obovoid when dry.   | 
(xviii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera pendula COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Shrub is 
slender and thin or small tree of 1.5-3.5 m long, with glabrous young 
twigs. Leaf blade is oblong-elliptique to oblong-lanceolate, usually quite long, 
acuminate at the tip, cuneiform at the base, coriaceous but thin, shiny; petiole 
and the midrib is orange brown. Flowers with fragrance, peduncle is 3-6cm long, 
inflorescence. White corolla. Fruit is blackish or slate blue, elongated and 
fusiform.  | 
(xix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera petrinensis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub low 
or dwarf tree of 1-1.5m high; twigs are glabrous; internodes are very 
short. Leaf blade is oblong or oblong-elliptical, acuminate at the tip, truncate 
at the base, coriaceous. Flowers with fragrance, a compact inflorescence, about 
2cm in diameter. Corolla is white. Fruit is ellipsoidal.  | 
(xx)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera psychotrioides COMMON NAME: Bois 
banane; Bois café; Bois de riviere LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
small tree is compact, 1.8-12m high; bark is dark brown, a bit frail, thin, 
deciduous; young twigs are glabrous or thinly pubescent. Leaf blade is oblong to 
oblong-oboval, rounded at the tip, less often pointed, cuneiform at the base, 
cariaceous. Flowers with fragrance. Inflorescence branching, reaching 13cm in 
width; peduncle 1-6cm long. Corolla is waxy white, glabrous or pubescent. Fruit 
is white crème or bluish, ellipsoid.  | 
(xxi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera rotundifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
small tree ramose of 1-6m high; branches are glabrous, +- tetragonal; bark is 
dark grey. Leaf blade is elliptical to oboval or +- rounded, acuminate at the 
tip, cueiform at the base, coriaceous, shiny, with revoluted margin. Flowers 
with fragrance, grouped; corolla is waxy white. Fruit is 
ellipsoidal.  | 
(xxii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera sp. COMMON NAME: Bois de 
riviere LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
about 6m high, with quite strong twigs. Leaf blade oblong-elliptical or +- 
oboval, pointed at the tip, cuneiform at the base, thin but coriaceous; petiole 
is strong, pubescent, 2.5-4cm long. Inflorescence is plentiful, pubescent; 
peduncle is 4cm long.   | 
(xxiii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera sp. A. COMMON NAME: Bois de la 
soupe LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xxiv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Gaertnera truncata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Small tree, slender and 
thin, 3.6-4.5m high; twigs are glabrous. Leaf blade is elliptical, pointed to 
acuminate at the tip, cuneiform at the base, quite coriaceous; petiole 1.5-2.2cm 
long. Inflorescence branching, with white branches; peduncle about 4-7cm long; 
corolla is white. Fruit is unknown.  | 
(xxv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Mussaenda arcuata COMMON NAME: Liane 
cacapoule LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A small 
shrub, sometimes creeping, with a terminal bunch of yellow flower, ornate at the 
center of an orange red star via a darker colour. Shrub sometimes creeping, 
reaching 0.5-7m high; branches usually glabrous, sometimes with spreading short 
hairs. Leaves often by 3, with petiole of 0.3-2.2cm long; lamina is coriaceous, 
elliptical to rounded. Flowers are +- sessile, with fragrance; corolla with tube 
greenish yellow, glabrous, pubescent.  | 
(xxvi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Mussaenda landia COMMON NAME: Quinquina 
indigene; Quinquina du pays LOCATION: Found in humid 
forest. STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree with wide tubulous flower that is white in colour. Bark has tonic and 
febrifuge properties. Small tree droit, 4.5-7m high, with branches spread; bark 
is smooth, brown grey, yellowish green within. Leaves are almost glabrous to 
velvety; lamina is elliptical, narrowly oval-elliptical, or oblong, shortly 
acuminate at the tip, rounded at the base. Inflorescence is multiflores; flowers 
with fragrance; corolla with tube greenish at the base and tip, reddish in the 
middle. Fruit is oblong, pubescent, dehiscent.  | 
(xxvii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Myonima 
vaughanii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Shrub with 
thick twigs, brown grey. Leaves with petiole 3-7mm long; lamina is narrowly 
rounded at the tip, rounded to cuneiform at the base, becoming brownish when 
drying. Inflorescence is short, 9-multiflores, trichotomous.  | 
(xxviii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Myonima 
violaceae COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Shrub very 
much branched or bush of 0.65-5m high; branches pale grey, glabrous. Leaves with 
petiole 1-4mm long; lamina is oblong, oval or elliptical-oblong, rounded at the 
tip, heart-shaped at the base, coriaceous but still thin, 
glabrous. Inflorescence is terminal, trichotomous, in cymes; corolla is white, 
tinted with pink on the outside. Fruit is red, sometimes with white rays, 
subspherical, fleshy, 6-9mm in diameter.  | 
(xxix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Oldenlandia sieberi COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Grass 
annual or perrenial, diffuse or compact, with several buds, glabrous, very 
short, forming a rosette or 2.5-15cm long and spreading. Leaves are narrowly 
elliptical, reduced at the base, obtuse or sub-pointed at the tip, 
subcoriaceous, having very short triangular hairs on both surfaces. Flowers are 
glabrous, solitary, one by each node; corolla is white. Fruit is of capsule 
type, compressed-obovoid, 2-4mm long and glabrous.  | 
(xxx)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Psathura borbonica COMMON NAME: Bois 
cassant LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
or slender bush, 1-4m high; cyme appears as an umbrella; small branches are very 
fragile, glabrous but the young parts are pubescent; trunk is of about 4-5cm in 
diameter; bark is grey, blackish or dark brown and not smooth; wood is very 
hard. Leaf blade is narrowly oblong-elliptical, pointed at the tip, cuneiform at 
the base, coriaceous, thin, discoloured. Inflorescence 
is axillary or terminal, 3-25-flowers. Flower with fragrance; corolla is white 
or yellowish white. Fruit is waxy white, spherical, ellipsoid or ovoid, 3-7mm 
long.  | 
(xxxi)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Psathura myrtifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
cassant a petites feuilles LOCATION: 
Brise-Fer STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
spreading or bush with an umbrella type cyme, 1-3m high; branches are slender, 
thin and glabrous. Leaf blade is elliptical or narrowly oboval, obtuse at the 
tip, cuneiform at the base. Inflorescence with peduncle of 4mm long, often 
3-flores; corolla is white. Fruit is ovoid-spherical, white, slightly rough, with thin flesh, spongious.  | 
(xxxii)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Psychotria balfouriana COMMON NAME: Bois 
lubine LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: Small shrub 
which is glabrous, with tetragonal twigs; twigs with grey bark, +- shiny. Leaves 
with petiole of about 1.5cm long; lamina is lanceolate, pointed at the tip, 
coriaceous, having dark reddish brown spots of resin on both surfaces. Flowers 
in terminal cluster; pedicels very short. Fruit unknown.  | 
(xxxiii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pyrostria cordifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
bush of 1.8-7.5m high, with trunk of 25cm in diameter; bark is brownish black; 
branches with pale grey bark. Leaf blade is oblong-lanceolate, elliptical, 
oblong or oval, rounded at the tip, rounded, truncate or heart-shaped at the 
base, coriaceous, thin, shiny above. Inflorescence 
consists only of male flowers. Female flowers are solitary, sessile. Fruit is 
subspherical, 8mm in diameter, 4-lobes.  | 
(xxxiv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pyrostria fasciculata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
bush of 2-6m high, with trunk of 3-5cm in diameter; bark is pale brown, smooth; 
branches becoming browns or yellowish grey when drying. Leaf blade is elliptical 
or elliptical-oblong, narrowly rounded or obtuse at the tip, cuneiform at the 
base, +- coriaceous, glabrous with revoluted margin. Inflorescences are 
sessile. Flowers are +- sessile, with fragrance; corolla is yellowish or pale 
pink.  | 
(xxxv)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pyrostria ferruginea COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: Small 
tree. Leaf blade is oblong-elliptical to oval-elliptical, rounded but +- obtuse 
at the tip, rounded or truncate at the base, coriaceous, glabrous; petiole 2-4mm 
long. Male flower is unknown. Female flowers are solitary, sessile.  | 
(xxxvi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pyrostria macrophylla COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Small tree 
reaching 8m high; branches are glabrous. Leaf blade is elliptical, rounded at 
the tip, cuneiform at the base, upper surface is often blackish purple, greyish 
blue-green beneath., coriaceous, glabrous. Male flowers 
are sessile, in group. Female flowers are sessile and solitary.  | 
(xxxvii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pyrostria viburnoides COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub which 
is bushy of 1.2-4m high and with trunk of 2cm in diameter; branches are 
straight, tetragonal. Leaf blade is elliptical, elliptical-oblong, rounded at 
the tip, sub-pointed, rounded or heart-shaped at the base, coriaceous, with 
revoluted margin. Inflorescence male3-8-flores. Female flowers are solitary. 
Fruit is subspherical, finely rough, with fine hairs.  | 
(xxxviii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Scyphochlamys revoluta COMMON NAME: Bois 
mangue LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(xxxix)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Spermacoce flagelliformis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Grass 
annual or perrenial, usually straight, not ramified to quite ramified at the base, 15-65cm high; bud is glabrous, +- 
angular. Leaf blade is linearly-elliptical, or linearly-lanceolate, pointed at 
the tip, glabrous on the lower surface. Flowers in whorl at the apical or 
subapical nodes. Fruit of capsule type, oblong-ellipsoidal, 2.5mm long, with 
long hairs on the apical part, capsule with 4 valves.  | 
(xxxx)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Spermacoce mauritiana COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Grass 
annual, not hardy, decumbent, or straight, 3-40cm long, usually branching; buds 
with crisped hairs. Leaf blade is elliptical to elliptical-lanceolate, rounded 
to pointed at the tip, reduced on the petiole, glabrous 
on both surface except the margin and the midrib. Flowers in small groups pauciflores found mostly near the nodes; corolla is 
white and long. Fruit is oblong, compressed, pubescent.  | 
(xxxxi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Spermacoce tenuior COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION: Grass 
annual, straight or creeping, 30-90cm long, with tetragonal buds, most are 
glabrous. Leaf blade is elliptical to linearly-elliptical, pointed at the tip, a 
petiole-like base, often thin, glabrous or puberulent on the upper 
surface. Corolla is white, white &pink or pale purple. Fruit is of capsule 
type, obovoid-subspherical to ellipsoid, dehiscent on top.  | 
44.  | FAMILY: 
RUPPIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Ruppia 
maritime COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Branches 
are long, slender and thin. Leaves are linear-filiform, 4-15cm long, pointed, 
with serrated margin. Peduncle 2-3mm long, curved, 
straighten after flowering and reaching 5cm. Fruit is ovoid, 2-3mm long, 
with a beak.  | 
45.  | FAMILY: 
RUTACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Euodia 
chapelieri COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: A low tree 
or slender shrub, little ramified reaching 5m high. 
Leaves uni-foliated, limb coriaceous, elliptical or oval, rounded at the tip and 
obtuse at the base. Inflorescence are variable, 
glabrous. Petals 2.2-2.6mm long, glabrous on the exterior.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Euodia 
obtusifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub or 
tree of about 10m high. Leaves almost tri-foliated, coriaceous, petiole short or 
long. Petals of inflorescence 1.7-2.7mm long, glabrous or pubescent on the 
exterior.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Vepris 
lanceolata COMMON NAME: Bois de 
patte de poule LOCATION: 
Brise-Fer STATUS: Rare, 
Indigenous DESCRIPTION: A shrub or 
small tree with more or less slender branches. Bark contains 2% tannin. Petiole 
1.5-7cm long, glabrous. Leaves more or less sessile, glabrous, margin entire, 
oboval, elliptical or oval at the tip, usually pointed at the base. 
Inflorescence is 2-10cm long, in general more or less conical, sometimes more 
wide than long or reduced in simple racemes, pauciflore. Flowers are in general 
more or less equidistant in female panicles and grouped in fascicles on lateral 
branches. Male pedicels are firmer than in female flowers. Petals oblong, the 
tip curved. Fruit becoming globose when dry and taste as pepper. Roots used 
against colic and influenza.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Zanthoxylum heterophylum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
catafaille noir LOCATION: Brise-Fer, 
Found on coastal forest. STATUS: Endangered, 
Indigenous DESCRIPTION: Tree with 
smooth, dark gray bark, trunk reaching 30-50cm diameters at breast height. Adult 
tree is usually without spine. Juvenile leaves 25-30cm long, adult leaves 
15-20cm long. Peduncles of inflorescence 3-7cm long, male inflorescence 
ramified, 15-20cm long and 6-13cm large bearing more then 100 flowers grouped in 
fascicles or in short raceme. Female inflorescence is 15-18cm long. Fruit 
sub-globose to largely ovoid. It is prescribed as stomachic and 
tonic.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Zanthoxylum paniculatum COMMON NAME: Bois 
pasner, Bambara LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: Spines more 
frequent on adult tree than in Zanthoxylon heterophyllum. Juvelile leaves 
collected only once. Foliage is very similar to Zanthoxylon heterophyllum. 
Flowers unknown. Fruit as in Zanthoxylon heterophyllum.  | 
46.  | FAMILY: 
SAPINDACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Molinaea alternifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Bois de 
gaulettes, Found at all altitude. STATUS: Not 
threatened, Endemic to Reunion and Mauritius. DESCRIPTION: 
Shrub.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Molinaea laevis COMMON NAME: Bois de 
gaulettes; Bois de sagaie blanc LOCATION: Found in 
dry region: Yemen, Magenta,Cabinet. STATUS: Not threatened, 
Endemic DESCRIPTION: 
shrub  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Molinaea macrantha COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Endemic in 
humid zone: Perrier, Petrin. Bel Ombre. STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Shrub It 
has a long cluster of pink flowers which flowers in the period Jan-March. It has 
ornamental interest.  | 
47.  | FAMILY: 
SAPOTACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Labourdonnaisia calophylloides COMMON NAME: Natte a 
petites feuilles LOCATION: STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A tree 
30-40 ft. high, glabrous in all its parts with stout branchlets. Leaves are 
crowded towards the end of the branchlets on petioles ½ in. long, oblong, 
obtuse, cuneate at the base, 2-4 in. long, very rigid, green beneath with fine 
immersed, erecto-patent veins. Flowers are solitary or crowded often drooping; 
pedicels, ½-11/2 in. long, petals 12, lanceolate, whitish as long as or rather 
longer than the sepal. It is a one-seeded brown berry.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon boutonianum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
fer LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A tree, 
glabrous in all its parts with moderately stout terete rugose branches. Leaves 
are glabrous, coriaceous, obovate-oblong, obtuse, rounded at the base, 3-6 in. 
long, and petiole ¼ to ½ in. long. Flowers are 3-6 in a cluster on slender 
pedicel, ¼-3/8 inch long; petals, lingulate, as long as the sepals.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon cinereum COMMON NAME: Manglier 
vert LOCATION: Endemic of 
median altitude STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching 10m high, often ramified very low with several trunks; bark dark gray. 
The blade is narrow to elliptical, glabrous on both surfaces; senescent leaves 
turning orange red before falling. Flowers are in fascicles, can flower several 
consecutive years and reaching 5-6mm high. Berry is spherical, about 1cm in diameter, containing abundant white 
latex.  | 
(iv)    | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon galateum COMMON NAME: Bois de 
pomme LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A 
heterophyllous tree, reaching more than 20m high. The bark is platanoid. Young 
leaves have linear limb. Adult leaves with blade elliptical to oblong, rounded 
at the tip. Flowers found in the axil of the leaves.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon grandiflorum COMMON NAME: 
Tambalacoque LOCATION: Bassin 
blanc STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A tree with 
stout terete branchlets. Leaves are crowded at the end of the branches, petiole 
¾-11/4 in, long. Flowers are 1-3 together, the nodes little raised, pedicles ¼-1 
in. long; petals, lingulate, as long as the sepals. Drupes are the size of a 
small apple with a thick fleshy pericarp.  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon puberulum COMMON NAME: Manglier 
rouge LOCATION: 
Florin, Found in coastal region STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Tree 
reaching 15m high, with trunk usually straight, not ramfied at the base; grey 
bark, +-smooth. Lamina of the leaves is elliptical to oboval, rounded at the 
tip, +- cuneiform at the base, with revoluted margin. Young leaves and branches 
are covered with a dense reddish brown tomentose hairs 
that is persistent during growth. Flowers fasciculees par 5-15, on the leafless 
part of the small branches. Hermaphrodite flowers with 5 sepals while female 
flowers are smaller with no corolla.  Berry is spherical, about 1cm in diameter, black when matured, containing an 
abundant white latex.   | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Sideroxylon sessiliflorum COMMON NAME: 
Conabo LOCATION: Grown beneath 
high canopy in humid forest. STATUS: Vulnerable, 
Endemic DESCRIPTION: Endemic 
shrub grown beneath high canopy in humid forest. Shrub mostly 
multicaule, reaching 8m high, with trunk of 10-15cm in diameter, few branching 
out near the summit. Leaves with lamina straightly elliptical, or obovate, 
rounded at the top, glabrous.  Berry is ovoid, 2-2.5cm long.  | 
48.  | FAMILY: 
SCROPHULARIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Bacopa 
monnieri COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Found in 
coastal regions STATUS: Unknown, 
Indigenous. DESCRIPTION: Perennial 
herb with creeping bud, rooted at the knots with fleshy leaves. Flowers are 
white with a purple tinge.
   | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Lindernia rotundifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Found in 
wetlands or riverbanks. STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Very small 
creeping herb with small, white flowers and blue or purple 
tinge.
   | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Torenia 
thouarsii COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Found on Mt 
Cocotte. STATUS: 
Unknown DESCRIPTION: Slender 
herb, rooted to the nodes with white flowers washed with a violet-blue 
colour.  | 
49.  | FAMILY: 
STERCULIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Dombeya 
populnea COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A tree, 
20-25 ft. high, glabrous throughout with slender terete branches. Leaves are 
thin, round-cordate, acute or acuminate, 3-4 in. long; petiole slender as long 
as the blade. Flowers are in peduncles as long as the petioles, pedicels, 1-3 
times of calyx; petals, ¼ -1/3 in. long, oblanceolate or obversely deltoid. 
Capsules are glabrous, depresso-globose, 1/6 in. thick.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Trochetia boutoniana COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Le 
Morne STATUS: Endangered, 
Endemic DESCRIPTION: Shrub 
reaching 2-3m high, trunk short, 20cm diameter, ramified rapidly in numerous 
branches. Leaves have limb that is strictly oval, oval-elliptical, obtuse to 
rounded at the tip, rounded to twisted at the base, 
petiole 1.5-3cm long, covered by whitish or yellowish scaly hairs. Peduncles are 
axillary, uniflore, 2-4cm long, pedicels 5-8mm long. Petals are asymmetrical, 
4.5cm long, red carmine in colour. Nectar is present in the corolla. Capsule is 
globose, 1.5-2cm diameter.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Trochetia parviflora COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Corps de 
Garde STATUS: Critically 
endangered DESCRIPTION: A 
much-branched low shrub with lepidote brown pubescence. Leaves are oblong, 
entire, 1-11/2 in. long, firm, obtuse, scabrous above rather rounded at the 
base, thinly scurfy beneath, petiole ¼ in. long. Flowers are found in peduncles 
erect, 3-flowered, longer than the petioles; petals are 
broad but not longer than the sepals.  | 
(iv)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Trochetia triflora COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Plaine Champagne STATUS: 
Vulnerable DESCRIPTION: A small 
tree with petioles, peduncles, leaves below and sepals clothed with dense brown, 
scurfy, pubescence. Leaves are oblong, crowded near the end of the branches, 4-6 
in. long, acute, sub-entire, broadly rounded at the base, coriaceous, green and 
scabrous above, covered with brown, tomentum beneath, petioled erect, 1-2 in. 
long. Flowers are in peduncles, much deflexed, exceeding the petiole, 
3-flowered; petals obovate, ½ as long as the sepals. Fruits are hard, oblong, 
furfuraceous.  | 
(v)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Trochetia uniflora COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: 
Plaine Champagne STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION: A low 
shrub, with petioles, peduncles and leaves below, clothed with dense brown 
scurfy pubescence. Leaves are oblong, 2-3 in. long, entire, firm, rounded at the 
base, obtuse, petiole ½-1 in., ascending or curved. Flowers are in peduncles 
1-flowered, deflexed exceeding the petioled. Capsules are hard, globose, 
furfuraceous, ¼-1/3 in. thick.  | 
50.  | FAMILY: 
SURIANACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Souriana maritima COMMON NAME: Bois 
matelot LOCATION: Flat island, 
Found on coastal corals. STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: A compact 
shrub reaching more than 1,50m high in the mascarenes but in other places, they 
can reach a small tree. The branches are covered of a dense, gray and hairy coat 
formed by glandulous and simple hairs, leaf scars very distinct. The leaves are 
grouped at the tip of branches, sessile, limb strictly obovate to 
obovate-oblong, quite coriaceous, rounded and obtuse at the tip and gradually 
narrow at the base. Inflorescence is axillary, having dense velved hairs as in 
the branches, sometimes more or less hidden by the leaves. Flowers are 3-6, the 
lateral ones developing later than the terminal ones. Petals are yellow, 
obovate, glabrous, the tip rounded and more or less vaguely serrated. Fruit is 
globose, blackish and 3-4mm in diameter. Recommended in case of Laffe 
sting-venimous fish.  | 
51.  | FAMILY: 
TACCACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Tacca 
artocarpifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Found at 
Nouvelle Decouverte, Camp Thorel. STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: 
Indigenous in Madagascar and possibly 
in Mauritius. The spike, which 
appear before the leaves is 1-3 cm long and bears white 
flowers.  | 
52.  | FAMILY: 
TRISTICHACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Tristicha trifaria COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Indeterminate DESCRIPTION:  | 
53.  | FAMILY: 
TURNERACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Mathurina pendulifolia COMMON NAME: Bois 
Gandine LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Tree of 
4-12m high, heterophyllous; pale wood, fine grain; bark is pale and rough; 
branches in whorl, straight; small branches reddish. Leaves are glabrous except 
near the base which is covert with thin short hairs, simple, pointed; juvenile 
lamina is linear with strictly revoluted margin; intermediate forms exist until 
the adult form, which is obovate, entire or crenated. Flowers axillary, peduncle 
1.6-4.4cm. petals are oval or oboval, white and 
glabrous. Fruit is a capsule which is ellipsoidal, dehiscent; valves 3, external 
surface greenish and interior is whitish.
   | 
54.  | FAMILY: 
Ulmaceae  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Celtis 
philippensis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Indeterminate DESCRIPTION:  | 
55.  | FAMILY: 
UMBELLIFERAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Centella asiatica COMMON NAME: Herbe 
boileau; Asiatic Pennywort LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Creeping 
herb, rooted to the knots. Leaves subcircular, V-shaped at the 
base.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pilea COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pilea 
pollicaris COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Endangered DESCRIPTION:  | 
(iv)    | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pilea 
thouarsiana COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Extinct DESCRIPTION:  | 
(v)    | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pilea 
trilobata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Indeterminate DESCRIPTION:  | 
(vi)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Pilea 
verbascifolia COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Mt 
Lagrave STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(vii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Pouzolzia laevigata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(viii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Procris 
pedunculata COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
(ix)   | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Urera 
acuminata COMMON NAME: Liane a 
gratter LOCATION: Found at 
Macchabee, Gorges Riviere Noire, Le Pouce, Cabinet. STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION: Small 
shrub, endemic, creeping and the exuded milky jus is very irritating to the eyes 
and skin.  | 
56.  | FAMILY: 
Violaceae  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: Viola 
inconspicua COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: 
Rare DESCRIPTION:  | 
57.  | FAMILY: 
ZANNICHELLIACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Halodule uninervis COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: Found all 
around the coast. STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Perrenial 
plants, graminiform. Rhizome with long internode, node with 1-6 roots, scales 
oval or elliptical. Leaves having tip with 2 linearly lateral parts. Fruit is 
globose with long beak.  | 
(ii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Syringodium isoetifolium COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Rhizome 
with internodes 1-3.5cm long. Scales 5mm long. Terminal cyme. Leaves are 
reduced, lamina not longer than 20mm. Both male and female flowers are 
similar. Fruit with beak of 2mm.  | 
(iii)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Thalassodendron ciliatum COMMON 
NAME: LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION: Hardy 
rhizome, 5mm in diameter, internodes of1-3cm long; scales are oval, 6mm long, 
deciduous, roots are helical. Bud 10-65cm long. Leaves are linear, green tinted 
with reddish purple, lightly reduced at the base, margin is entire. Flowers are 
almost sessile, yellow tint with red. Fruit is oblong, 3-5cm long.  | 
58.  | FAMILY: 
ZINGIBERACEAE  | 
(i)  | SCIENTIFIC NAME: 
Aframomum angustifolium COMMON NAME: Longouze; 
Zedoaire du pays LOCATION: STATUS: Not 
threatened DESCRIPTION:   |