Wild flora with high attractiveness and has been long prized for its beauty will be planted in gardens and other recreational places to
enhance the landscape beautification. Foliage arrangement, branching pattern, and the presence of fruit and flower provide interest,
variety and aesthetic appeal to landscapes and even to observers. This study was carried out in Sg. Rawog Conservation Area (SRCA) within
the KTS Plantation vicinity. The main objective of this study was to identify ornamental plants, and their International Union Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) categories based on conservation status and endemism by using the opportunistic sampling method. The selection of the ornamental
plant is based on five criterions: 1) It has a good form, shape and size of the plant, 2) It has colorful flowers and fruits, 3) It has
attractive colors and arrangement of the foliage, 4) it has good branching pattern, and 5) it is easy for plant to propagate. The survey was
conducted twice, in June and August 2019, in existing trails. A total of 24 species belong to 17 different families. The highest number of
potential ornamental plants found in Sg Rawog Conservation Area is the Tree (29.2%) followed by the Fern (16.7%) and Shrub (20.8%),
Herb (12.5%), 8.3% of which are shared by two plants habit (Pitcher and Palm), and lastly, the lowest is Climber (4.2%).
Most plants are in the category Not Evaluated based on IUCN Red List except Dryobalanops aromatic, Dicranopteris linearis,
Nepenthes ampularia, and Nepenthes mirabilis. The findings of this study indicate that Sg. Rawog Conservation Area is a home
to a large number of plants with the potential of to become ornamental plants, and it plays an essential role in the protection
of these species in Sabah. More research may be required to expand the list of plants with the potential to become ornamental plants.
Aswandi, A. & Kholibrina, C. R. 2021. New insights into Sumatran camphor (Dryobalanops aromatica Gaertn) management and conservation in western coast Sumatra, Indonesia. IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, 739(2021), 012061.
Estrada-Castillón, E., Garza-López, M., Villarreal-Quintanilla, J. A., Salinas-Rodriguez, M. M., Soto-Mata, B. E., González-Rodriguez, H., González-Uribe, D. U., Cantú Silva, I., Carrillo-Parra A. & Cantú-Ayala, C. 2014. Ethnobotany in Rayones, Nuevo. León, México. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 10, Article number 62(2014).
Dublin, H. 2023. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (https://www.britannica.com/topic/IUCN-Red-List-of-Threatened-Species). Last accessed on 25 April, 2023.
Fitzpatrick, U., Murray, T. E., Paxton, R. J. & Brown, M. J. 2007. Building on IUCN regional Red Lists to produce lists of species of conservation priority: a model with Irish bees. Conservation Biology, 21, 1324–1332.
Saumure, K. & Given L. M. 2008. Convenience Sample. In: Given L. M. (Ed). The SAGE Encyclopaedia of Qualitative Research Methods. Los Angeles: SAGE Publications, Inc. pp. 124 - 125.
John, S. V., Salegin, J. D., Patrick, M., Mojiol, A. R., & Lintangah, W. 2019. Medicinal plants of Sg. Rawog Conservation Area, Segaliud Lokan Forest Reserve, Sandakan, Sabah. Sabah Forestry Department and KTS Plantation Sdn. Bhd. 99-110.
Kulip, J. 2014. The Ethnobotany of Dusun people in Tikolod village, Tambunan district, Sabah, Malaysia. Reinwardtia, 14(1), 101-121.
Kumar, J. I., Soni, H., & Kumar, R. N. 2005. Aesthetic values of selected floral elements of Khatana and Waghai Forests of Dangs, Extreme Northern Part of Western Ghats, India. Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge, 4(3), 275-286.
Li, X. X., & Zhou, Z. K. 2005. Endemic wild ornamental plants from Northwestern Yunnan, China. Hortscience, 40(6), 1612–1619.
Mace, G. M., Collar, N. J., Cooke, J., Gaston, K. J., Ginsberg, J., Leader-Williams, N., Maunder, M. & Milner-Gulland, E. J. 1993. The development of new criteria for listing species on the IUCN Red List. Species, 19, 16–22.
Garber, M. 2009. Environmental enhancement with ornamental plants: Attracting bird (Circular 976, University of Georgia) (https://esploro.libs.uga.edu/esploro/outputs/report/Environmental-enhancement-with-ornamental-plants-attracting-birds/9949316111502959). Last accessed on 25 April, 2023.
Mojiol, A. R., Lim, W. S., Chung, K. C. L., & Dani, J. L. 2022. The benefit of urban green area in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. In IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, 1053(1), 012001.
Simaika, J. P. & Samways, M. J. 2009. Reserve selection using Red Listed taxa in three global biodiversity hotspots: dragonflies in South Africa. Biological Conservation, 142(3), 638-651.
Suzana, S., Damit, A., Andi, M. A. & Sugau, J. B. 2019. Potential Ornamental Plants of Sg. Rawog Conservation Area, Sabah. Seminar on Sungai Rawog Conservation Area Scientific Expedition. Sabah Forestry Department and KTS Plantation Sdn. Bhd. pp. 100-110.