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Trees such as eucalyptus, sea hibiscus, and avocado are brittle (easy to break) and are damaged more easily.
The widespread Sea Hibiscus is found at its southernmost limit of natural distribution at Sea Acres.
Bottle gourd plants, ironwood, sea hibiscus and mangroves are common nearby, while great morinda and coconut palm are rare.
Sea Hibiscus is well adapted to grow in coastal environment in that it tolerates salt and waterlogging and can grow in quartz sand, coral sand, marl, limestone, and crushed basalt.
Traditionally, dessert banana plants and local wild beach flora such as Scaevola taccada and Ipomoea pes-caprae were used as humidity-supplying green undergrowth for coconut trees, mixed with sea almond and sea hibiscus.
While no species of tree is guaranteed to stand up to hurricane-force winds, those with shallow roots are more prone to uproot, and brittle trees such as eucalyptus, sea hibiscus, and avocado are more prone to damage.
Hibiscus tiliaceus (Beach hibiscus) - a small tree, 5 to 8 metres high, commonly found in monsoon pockets along the coast and river banks.
Scaevola taccada is sometimes found growing in loose plant communities with coconut palms, soldierbush, beach morning glory, beach gardenia, several pandanus species, beach calophyllum followed by portia tree, sea almond, beach hibiscus, Cordia subcordata and others.
Alyogyne cuneiformis (Coastal Hibiscus)