No sure where Taylors gets all his woods, Africa primarily, and sustainably grown by him on plantations, what a visionary.
The Guild wood dates back to decades prior, and while they don't talk about timbers much in the electric world, I'd read Peruvian Mahogany in many period acoustic ads/brochures.
The Honduras Mahogany has been for all intents and purposes been gone for decades.
When I started playing Gibsons, the big deal was that all the vintage Gibby guitars - pre Norlin = pre 1967 - even down to lowly "Jr." models were thick slabs of 400 year old Honduras Mahogany, as in big trees. Old growth, and with the guitar booms and demand, there was never to be "old growth" again.
I remember playing this super mongrelized LP Jr. of completely unknown age that was just fantastic, ripping out some killer stuff in a busy store, the owner comes over and compliments my playing by saying "It's the old wood", i.e not a lot to do with my playing ;] The guitar was just downright special and made everything you played sound sublime.