The genus is famed as the supplier of
mahogany, at first yielded by
Swietenia mahagoni, a Caribbean species, which was so extensively used locally and exported that its trade ended by the 1950s. These days almost all mahogany is yielded by the mainland species,
Swietenia macrophylla, although no longer from its native locations due to the restrictions set by
CITES (see following.) Trade in Swietenia grown and harvested in non-native locations such as the Asian countries
Fiji,
Indonesia,
India, and
Bangladesh is not restricted. Species of this genus are only occasionally plantation-grown in Central America, in spite of the good growing conditions and high price of the wood, due to the ubiquitous presence of the mahogany shoot borer moth (also known as the cedar tip moth),
Hypsipyla grandella, which damages the form of the tree by killing the terminal shoot, causing excessive branching. Control requires extensive and frequent spraying with pesticides, rendering the genus relatively uneconomic wherever the shoot borer is present. The fruits of
Swietenia macrophylla are called "sky fruit", because they seem to hang upwards from the tree. The "sky fruit" concentrate is sold as a natural remedy that is said to improve blood circulation and skin. It is also said to have
Viagra-like qualities regarding erectile dysfunction. A somewhat comparable wood is yielded by the related African genus
Khaya. This is traded as
African mahogany and is from the same family as
Swietenia. ==Conservation==