Just a thought - making an 80lb bow using hickory and some other wood is a vastly different job than making a 120lb bow from bamboo and ipe. They're two different animals altogether.
Personally, I'd pick one set of timbers you can obtain over and over again, and make a whole range of bow weights using them, from 80lb up to your final goal (160 I suppose*) Otherwise the experience you gain with the hickory/Osage for example will be more or less useless when dealing with a super-fast and physically small/narrow combo like boo/ipe.
As for the yew bow at the end of your list, you'd normally expect a 160lb yew bow from somebody who's been working with yew for about 5 years constantly pushing it to the limit.
I'm by no means saying it can't be done - of course it can - but it will be incredibly difficult to make the bows you've listed without a whole load of others in between. And that's not counting the bows that blow up, chrysal on you or otherwise end up unsatisfactory.
*What weight can you shoot at the moment? 160lb is the upper limit of most people, and the number of guys who can shoot that weight around the world can be pretty much counted on one hand. It's not important in terms of what bows you want to make, I'm just curious