Ficus vogeliana is a species within the family Moraceae which bears flagellifom infructescences. Its outer bark tends to be greyish in color while the slash is reddish.[1]
Ficus vogeliana is a medium to large sized tree that reaches 20 m in height with buttressed roots. Leaves arranged in spirals with persistent stipules that can reach up to 2 cm long, petioles present and can be up to 5 cm long and 3 mm in thickness; upper surface off the leaves is scabrous.[2] Leaf blade tends to be elliptical to oblong, up to 22 cm long and 11 cm wide with an acuminate apex and a cordate base. Figs usually borne on branches at the base of the trunk.
Occurs in Liberia, West Africa extending eastwards to the Central African Republic and southwards to Angola. Commonly found in seasonnally flooded environments, swamp and evergreen forests.
The trunk of the tree is used as raw materials for canoe making in Sierra Leone while its woods is useful for carpentry work.
A decoction of bark extracts is used in traditional medecine among the Fang of Gabon who drank it as an emetic, another decoction is also used in the treatment of stomach cancer, while a leaf decoction is used in Gabon to induce vomiting.[3]