Many thanks to Keith Leber and David Strauch for the content of this page.
Cassia bakeriana, native to S. E. Asia, is a member of the pea family.
Adansonia digitata, native to tropical Africa, is in the Bombax family.
Pachira insignis, native to the West Indies and South America, is in the Bombax family.
Close-up of Pachira Insignis.
Latania loddigesii, native to the Mascarene Islands in the Indian Ocean.
Brownia coccinea, native to American tropics, is in the Pea family.
Sterculia foetida, native to the Old World tropics, is in the Cocoa family.
Tabebuia donnell-smithii, from Mexico and Central America.
Agatha robusta, native to Australia, is in the Auracaria family.
Spathodea campanulata is native to tropical Africa and belongs to the Bignonia family.
Ficus microcarpa is originally from Sri Lanka to southern China; it belongs to the Fig family.
UH-Manoa Campus Plants (flickr site)
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Who could imagine such a wonderland of trees on the UH campus?
Thank you, Keith and Pat.
perle
Keith will be contributing more things, so stay tuned, Perle! This will become a very important part of the blog.
Nice photographs! Are you folks going to construct a new plant list of the campus plants of UHM?–So interested people could do a self-guided tour?
They should be able to do that using the resources on this page. Let me know if there’s any problem with the links, Angela.