I made up a demo file with repeating content controls and a linked xml file. You can amend the list of trees by taking this back to a single table row and then editing the properties of the combobox Content Control (on the Developer Tab) so the list is as you want it.
This demo makes use of an embedded xml file with an element linked to the two content controls so that if the first one changes, the value appears in the second one.
You can add new rows as you need them by clicking on the Plus sign that appears at the end of a row when you select something in that row. You can also right click on a row to add or remove a row.
Note that this will not work in Word 2010 or earlier - it uses a feature introduced in Word 2013.
Whilst I used a macro to create the embedded xml file, it is not needed in operating the file so it isn't included in this example.
The actual list you use could be enormously long although I would think there would be some level of pragmatism applied. I would expect that you don't really need to include in the list 'every' tree's common and scientific names. It is more realistic to expect the OP's list to include only the tree types endemic to the location, that the author actually can identify, and can remember the common name of.
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Andrew Lockton
Chrysalis Design, Melbourne Australia
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