Epicharis parasitica, commonly known as yellow mahogany, is a species of rainforest tree in the family Meliaceae native to Taiwan, parts of Malesia, Papuasia, and northeast Queensland.
Epicharis parasitica grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . Buttresses may be present, growing up to tall and wide. The bark is yellowish to grey-brown, and smooth to flaky with scattered lenticels.
The compound leaves are arranged spirally on the twigs and measure up to long with up to 19 leaflets. Leaflets are oblong to ovate in shape and up to long by wide, with about 14 lateral veins each side of the midrib.
The inflorescence is a raceme up to long, growing from protrusions on the trunk of the tree in a process called cauliflory, or from woody branches (ramiflory). The sweetly scented flowers are white or cream with four petals. The white staminal tube measures about long and wide.
The fruit is a globose red-brown capsule about diameter. It has up to four segments with one seed contained in each. The seeds are about long, brownish-black and with an orange-red sarcotesta.
This species was first described by the Swedish naturalist Pehr Osbeck as Melia parasitica, and published in 1757 in his book Dagbok ofwer en Ostindisk Resa aren 1750, 1751, 1752. Since then, it had been described more than 40 times by various authors who gave it various names (see synonyms), before it was transferred to the genus Dysoxylum by Indonesian botanist André Joseph Guillaume Henri Kostermans in 1966. Australian populations were known as Dysoxylum schiffneri.
The genus name comes from the Latin dys meaning 'bad', and the Ancient Greek xylon meaning 'wood', and refers to the unpleasant smell produced by some species. The species epithet is from the Latin word parasiticus meaning 'parasitic', referring to Osbeck's early mistaken belief that the flowers were parasitic.
The yellow mahogany's natural range includes Taiwan, the Philippines, Borneo, Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi, Maluku, East Timor, New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, the Solomon Islands and Queensland. It grows in well developed rainforest, including that on limestone, at altitudes from sea-level to around .
The flowers are visited by butterflies, an important pollinator of the family. Possums and bats also contribute to the pollination as they climb the trunk of the tree looking for food.
Epicharis parasitica has potential as a feature tree in parks or gardens in areas with subtropical or tropical climates.
It prefers acid soils with good drainage and dappled sun or part-shade. The species can be propagated by fresh seed.