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List of Rainforest Flora

Tropical rainforests are living libraries of plant diversity, where layers of vegetation create complex habitats from the forest floor to the canopy. This list highlights species you might encounter across different rainforest regions, organized for quick comparison.

There are 37 rainforest flora, ranging from Agarwood to Wollemi pine. For each species you’ll find below entries organized by Scientific name,Height (m),Range to help you compare taxonomy, typical size, and geographic distribution — you’ll find below.

How were these 37 species chosen?

They were selected to represent a mix of well-known, ecologically important, and conservation-relevant plants across tropical and temperate rainforests; the aim was breadth rather than completeness, so the list includes species that illustrate different families, growth forms, and ranges.

How can I use the Scientific name,Height (m),Range columns in the field?

Use the Scientific name to avoid confusion from common names, the Height (m) to narrow down likely candidates by size, and the Range to confirm whether a species occurs in your area; together they make quick, practical checks before consulting photos or local field guides.

Rainforest Flora

Name Scientific name Height (m) Range
Brazil nut Bertholletia excelsa 40 Amazon Basin (Brazil, Peru, Bolivia)
Kapok Ceiba pentandra 60 Neotropics, West Africa, South Asia
Big-leaf mahogany Swietenia macrophylla 40 Neotropics from Mexico to Bolivia
Rubber tree Hevea brasiliensis 30 Amazon Basin (native)
Cacao Theobroma cacao 8 Upper Amazon, Central America
Balsa Ochroma pyramidale 30 Neotropics (Central & South America)
Strangler fig Ficus spp. 25 Pantropical rainforests
Dipterocarp Shorea spp. 50 Southeast Asian rainforests
Rattan Calamus spp. 30 Southeast Asian rainforests
Sea heart liana Entada gigas 30–100 Neotropics, Caribbean
Epiphytic orchid Orchidaceae (epiphytic genera) 0.5 Pantropical rainforests
Tank bromeliad Bromeliaceae (tank species) 0.3 Neotropical rainforests
Tree fern Cyathea spp. 8 Pantropical and temperate rainforests
Cecropia Cecropia spp. 20 Neotropical rainforests
Açaí palm Euterpe oleracea 25 Amazon floodplain & várzea forests
Raphia palm Raphia spp. 20 African and Madagascar rainforests
Heliconia Heliconia spp. 2 Neotropical rainforests
Torch ginger Etlingera elatior 3 Southeast Asian rainforests
Agarwood Aquilaria malaccensis 25 Southeast Asian rainforests
Jackfruit Artocarpus heterophyllus 20 South & Southeast Asian rainforests
Sitka spruce Picea sitchensis 70 Pacific Northwest temperate rainforests
Western redcedar Thuja plicata 60 Pacific Northwest temperate rainforests
Southern beeches Nothofagus spp. 30 Southern temperate rainforests (Patagonia, NZ, Australia)
Kauri Agathis australis 50 New Zealand temperate rainforests
Rafflesia Rafflesia arnoldii 0.5 Southeast Asian lowland rainforests
Wollemi pine Wollemia nobilis 40 Warm temperate rainforests, Australia (very restricted)
Guaraná Paullinia cupana 5 Amazon Basin
Tropical pitcher plant Nepenthes spp. 1–3 Southeast Asian rainforests
Sago palm Metroxylon sagu 10 Southeast Asian peat and swamp rainforests
Tropical bamboo Bambusa spp. 15 Pantropical rainforests (Asia, Americas)
Mangosteen Garcinia mangostana 20 Sundaic rainforests (Indonesia, Malaysia)
Ebony Diospyros ebenum 25 Sri Lanka, southern India, Southeast Asian rainforests
Cycad (Zamia) Zamia spp. 1 Neotropical rainforests
Copaiba Copaifera spp. 30 Amazon Basin and Central America
Andiroba Carapa guianensis 30 Amazon Basin, Guianas
Brazilwood Caesalpinia echinata 20 Atlantic Forest, Brazil
Paraná pine Araucaria angustifolia 40 Atlantic temperate rainforests (southern Brazil)

Images and Descriptions

Brazil nut

Brazil nut

Large emergent tree producing nutrient-rich nuts that are a keystone food source for Amazonian wildlife and an important income for local communities. It relies on intact forest and specific pollinators; habitat loss and overharvesting threaten genetic diversity and population stability.

Kapok

Kapok

Massive emergent with a buttressed trunk and cottony seed fibers that float through the canopy. Kapok provides structural habitat for epiphytes and birds; its fibers and lightweight timber have traditional uses, though trees are often vulnerable where forests are cleared.

Big-leaf mahogany

Big-leaf mahogany

Iconic canopy tree prized for high-quality mahogany timber used in furniture and instruments. It supports diverse canopy fauna but has been heavily logged; wild populations are fragmented and subject to regulation and conservation efforts due to unsustainable harvest.

Rubber tree

Rubber tree

Large rainforest tree historically tapped for natural rubber before plantation expansion. Wild rubber trees support complex forest ecosystems and genetic diversity important for disease resistance; deforestation and conversion to plantations have changed its ecological and economic role.

Cacao

Cacao

Small understory tree producing cacao beans, the source of chocolate. Wild and semi-wild cacao depends on forest shade, specific pollinators, and soil conditions; conserving wild populations preserves genetic diversity that benefits agriculture and forest biodiversity.

Balsa

Balsa

Fast-growing pioneer tree with exceptionally lightweight wood used for models, flotation, and crafts. Balsa colonizes disturbed gaps, providing rapid canopy cover and habitat for early-successional species; harvesting can be sustainable when forests are managed well.

Strangler fig

Strangler fig

Many hemi‑epiphytic Ficus begin life on other trees and later envelop hosts, becoming massive stranglers. Figs fruit year-round and are a keystone resource for birds, bats, and primates; they shape forest succession and provide critical food in lean seasons.

Dipterocarp

Dipterocarp

Dominant emergent canopy trees in SE Asian lowland rainforests that produce valuable timber and resin. Dipterocarps exhibit mast fruiting that structures animal populations; logging and land conversion have made many species conservation priorities in the region.

Rattan

Rattan

Climbing palms providing flexible canes used for furniture, baskets, and livelihoods. Rattan grows across the understory and climbs into the canopy, connecting strata and supporting wildlife; unsustainable harvesting and forest loss have reduced wild stocks in many areas.

Sea heart liana

Sea heart liana

Gigantic woody vine that can span canopy gaps and send buoyant pods across oceans. Lianas like Entada connect tree crowns, create wildlife pathways, and compete with trees for light; they are ecologically important though sometimes increase after disturbance.

Epiphytic orchid

Epiphytic orchid

A diverse assemblage of showy, often fragrant plants growing on trunks and branches without harming hosts. Epiphytic orchids support specialized pollinators and add dramatic biodiversity to canopy microhabitats; many species are sensitive to habitat disturbance and collection pressure.

Tank bromeliad

Tank bromeliad

Rosette-forming epiphytes that capture and store rainwater in leaf “tanks,” creating miniature aquatic habitats for frogs, insects, and microorganisms. These bromeliads recycle nutrients in the canopy and are important for many rainforest food webs.

Tree fern

Tree fern

Tall, trunked ferns that create distinctive understory structure and microclimates in shaded forests. Tree ferns are ancient plants valued for their ecological role and cultural uses, and they are sensitive to logging, fire, and microclimate changes.

Cecropia

Cecropia

Fast-growing pioneer trees common in disturbed forest gaps that host mutualistic ants in hollow stems. Cecropia stabilizes soils, provides quick canopy cover and fruits for wildlife, and plays a major role in early successional stages after disturbance.

Açaí palm

Açaí palm

Slender, clustering palm producing açaí berries that are economically important locally and globally. These palms form dense stands in floodplain forests, support floodplain ecology, and provide non-timber income streams to riverine communities.

Raphia palm

Raphia palm

Gigantic-leaved palms used for fiber, weaving, and thatching; some species dominate swampy rainforest zones. Raphia supports traditional livelihoods, provides habitat structure, and is culturally and economically significant in many African rainforest societies.

Heliconia

Heliconia

Striking understory herbs with colorful bracts that feed and attract hummingbirds and other pollinators. Heliconias are important nectar sources, often used as indicator plants for healthy understory communities and sometimes cultivated as ornamentals.

Torch ginger

Torch ginger

Showy herb with large, edible inflorescences used in regional cuisines and rituals. Torch ginger thrives in humid understories, attracts pollinators like bees and birds, and contributes to cultural and culinary heritage while being sensitive to habitat alteration.

Agarwood

Agarwood

Tree that produces fragrant agarwood resin when infected by fungi; highly prized for incense and perfumery. Overharvesting for high-value resin has driven wild populations toward endangerment, prompting cultivation and conservation measures in native ranges.

Jackfruit

Jackfruit

Large fruit-bearing canopy tree native to humid rainforest margins, producing massive fruits eaten by people and wildlife. Jackfruit trees support agroforestry systems, cultural food traditions, and provide shade and structural habitat in forested landscapes.

Sitka spruce

Sitka spruce

Tall coastal conifer dominating many temperate rainforests of the North American Pacific coast. Sitka spruce supports rich old-growth ecosystems, provides nesting and shelter sites, and is a key timber species with conservation interest for intact forests.

Western redcedar

Western redcedar

Long-lived conifer central to Indigenous cultures for clothing, shelters, and canoes; its rot-resistant wood and ecological role in old-growth forests make living stands conservation priorities in temperate rainforest management.

Southern beeches

Southern beeches

Dominant canopy trees in many southern temperate rainforests that structure ecosystems and leaf litter processes. Nothofagus forests host unique understory communities and fungi and are critical for conserving southern hemisphere biodiversity patterns.

Kauri

Kauri

Massive conifer endemic to New Zealand with deep ecological and cultural significance. Kauri trees form ancient canopy giants; their survival is threatened by kauri dieback disease, making conservation of remnant rainforest stands urgent.

Rafflesia

Rafflesia

Parasitic plant known for producing the world’s largest single flowers that smell of carrion to attract pollinators. Rafflesia is highly specialized, rare, and vulnerable to habitat loss and collection, capturing public fascination while requiring forest protection.

Wollemi pine

Wollemi pine

Living fossil conifer known from a tiny, hidden Australian rainforest population; critically important to conservation biology. Wollemi pine represents ancient rainforest lineages and is subject to strict protection due to its extreme rarity.

Guaraná

Guaraná

Climbing shrub producing caffeine-rich seeds used traditionally and commercially in beverages. Guaraná grows in shady understory habitats, contributes to local economies, and wild genetic diversity is important for cultivation resilience and rainforest conservation.

Tropical pitcher plant

Tropical pitcher plant

Carnivorous climbing plants with pitfall traps that capture insects and sometimes small vertebrates, adapted to nutrient-poor soils. Nepenthes species form unique microhabitats, are often range-restricted, and face pressure from habitat loss and plant collecting.

Sago palm

Sago palm

Staple starch source for many island and coastal communities, harvested from trunk pith; sago palms dominate swampy rainforest zones and are integral to local diets, culture, and wetland ecology where they grow.

Tropical bamboo

Tropical bamboo

Fast-growing woody grasses forming understory thickets or emergent clumps that provide rapid regrowth after disturbance. Tropical bamboos supply construction materials, habitat and food for wildlife, and are important in many traditional forest economies.

Mangosteen

Mangosteen

Fruit tree native to humid rainforest understories producing prized mangosteen fruit. Wild populations are limited and tied to intact forest habitats; conserving native stands helps maintain genetic diversity and ecological interactions with seed dispersers.

Ebony

Ebony

Dense, dark hardwood historically overharvested for fine furniture and instruments. Ebony trees are slow-growing rainforest canopy species with restricted ranges; conservation focuses on protecting remnant forests and regulating timber extraction.

Cycad (Zamia)

Cycad (Zamia)

Small, ancient gymnosperms producing starchy seeds and distinctive leaf crowns; some Zamia species occur in shaded rainforest understories. Many cycads are threatened by habitat loss and illegal collection, making in-situ habitat protection vital.

Copaiba

Copaiba

Canopy trees producing resin widely used in traditional medicine and modern industry for oils and anti-inflammatory extracts. Copaiba trees contribute to carbon storage and forest structure, and sustainable harvesting supports local economies while conserving stands.

Andiroba

Andiroba

Large wet-forest tree yielding bitter, neem-like seed oil used medicinally and as an insect repellent. Andiroba is a valuable non-timber forest product that encourages sustainable use of floodplain and terra firme rainforest resources.

Brazilwood

Brazilwood

Historic source of red dye and the country’s namesake, once abundant in Atlantic rainforest but now highly reduced by logging and land conversion. Brazilwood is endangered in the wild and protected within remnant coastal rainforest fragments.

Paraná pine

Paraná pine

Tall conifer formerly dominant in southern Brazilian mixed rainforests, producing edible seeds important to indigenous diets. Extensive logging and land-use change have made this species critically endangered, necessitating habitat restoration and protection.

Other Rainforest Types