Bloodwood

Bloodwood is a common name for several unrelated trees, including:


 * Baloghia inophylla (Brush or Scrub bloodwood), Baloghia marmorata (Marbled bloodwood), Baloghia parviflora (Small-flowered bloodwood), all found in Australia
 * Brosimum rubescens, a tree found in Central and South America
 * Many Myrtaceae trees in the genus Corymbia from Australia, formerly from the genus Eucalyptus; Corymbia gummifera (Red bloodwood), Corymbia intermedia (Pink bloodwood), Corymbia ptychocarpa (Swamp and Spring bloodwood), Corymbia opaca (Desert bloodwood), Corymbia eximia (Yellow bloodwood) etc.
 * Casuarina equisetifolia, found in Southeast Asia, Northern Australia and the Pacific
 * Cyrilla racemiflora found in the Neotropics
 * Gordonia haematoxylon, a tree from Jamaica
 * Haematoxylum campechianum, a tree from Central America and Caribbean
 * Lagerstroemia speciosa (Indian bloodwood)
 * Several trees from the genus Pterocarpus from Africa and Asia, the trees yields a red exsudate which soon harden into crimson tears (Kino, Dragon's blood); Pterocarpus angolensis, Pterocarpus erinaceus, Pterocarpus rotundifolius, Pterocarpus indicus, Pterocarpus officinalis (Dragon's blood), etc. The Pterocarpus wood is traded under different names but normally not as bloodwood.
 * Vachellia haematoxylon (Syn.: Acacia haematoxylon) Bloodwood-Acacia, southern Africa