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Agarwood

Agarwood, aloeswood, eaglewood or gharuwood is a fragrant dark resinous wood used in incense, perfume, and small carvings. This resinous wood is most commonly referred to as "Oud" or "Oudh". It is formed in the heartwood of aquilaria trees when the Acquilara Tree becomes infected with a type of mold (Phialophora parasitica) and secretes a resin to combat the mold. Prior to infection, the heartwood is odourless, relatively light and pale coloured; however, as the infection progresses, the tree produces a dark aromatic resin, called aloes (not to be confused with Aloe ferox, the succulent commonly known as the bitter aloe) or agar (not to be confused with the edible, algae-derived agar) as well as gaharu, jinko, oud, or oodh aguru (not to be confused with bukhoor), in response to the attack, which results in a very dense, dark, resin-embedded heartwood. The resin-embedded wood is valued in East and South Asian cultures for its distinctive fragrance, and thus is used for incense and perfumes.

Cultivated aloes/agar wood
Uninfected aquilaria wood lacking the dark resin

One of the main reasons for the relative rarity and high cost of agarwood is the depletion of the wild resource.[1] Since 1995, Aquilaria malaccensis, the primary source, has been listed in Appendix II (potentially threatened species) by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.[2] In 2004, all Aquilaria species were listed in Appendix II; however, a number of countries have outstanding reservations regarding that listing.[2]

The aromatic qualities of agarwood are influenced by the species, geographic location, its branch, trunk and root origin, length of time since infection, and methods of harvesting and processing.[3]

First-grade agarwood is one of the most expensive natural raw materials in the world,[4] with 2010 prices for superior pure material as high as US$100,000/kg, although in practice adulteration of the wood and oil is common, allowing for prices as low as US$100/kg.[5] A whole range of qualities and products are on the market, varying in quality with geographical location, botanical species, the age of the specific tree, cultural deposition and the section of the tree where the piece of agarwood stems from.[6] As of 2013, the current global market for agarwood is estimated to be in the range of US$6 – 8 billion and is growing rapidly.[7]

Denomination

Etymology

The word ultimately comes from one of the Dravidian languages,[8][9] probably from Tamil அகில் (agil).[10]

Vernacular names

 
Aquilaria tree showing darker agarwood. Poachers had scraped off the bark to allow the tree to become infected by the ascomycetous mould.

Agarwood is known under many names in different cultures:

  • Another name is Lignum aloes or Aloeswood, unrelated to the familiar genus, Aloe. Also from aghil, via Hebrew and Greek.[11]
  • In Assamese it is called as "xasi" (সাঁচি).[12]
  • In Bengali, agarwood is known as agor gach (আগর গাছ) and the agarwood oil as agor ator (আগর আতর).
  • In Odia, it is called as "agara" (ଅଗର).
  • In Cambodia, it is called "chann crassna". The fragrance from this wood is called "khloem chann" (ខ្លឹមចាន់) or "khloem chann crassna". "khloem" is hard wood, "chann crassna" is the tree species Aquilaria crassna in the Khmer language.
  • In Hindi, it is known as agar, which is derived originally from the Sanskrit aguru.[13][14]
  • In Sinhala Agarwood producing Gyrinops walla tree is known as "Walla Patta" (වල්ල පට්ට).
  • In Tamil it is called "aghil" (அகில்) though what was referred in ancient Tamil literature could well be Excoecaria agallocha.
  • In Telugu and Kannada, it is known by the same Sanskrit name as Aguru.
  • It is known as Chénxiāng (沉香) in Chinese, Chimhyang (침향) in Korean, Jinkō (沈香) in Japanese, and trầm hương in Vietnamese; all meaning "deep scent" and alluding to its intense scent. In Japan, there are several grades of Jinkō, the highest of which is known as Kyara (伽羅).[15][16] In Vietnam, ancient texts also refer to the use of agarwood in relation to travelling Buddhist monks.[17]
  • In Tibetan it is known as ཨ་ག་རུ་ (a-ga-ru). There are several varieties used in Tibetan Medicine: unique eaglewood: yellow eaglewood: ཨ་ག་རུ་སེར་པོ་ (a-ga-ru ser-po), white eaglewood: ཨར་སྐྱ་ (ar-skya), and black eaglewood: ཨར་ནག་(ar-nag).[18][19]
  • Both agarwood and its resin distillate/extracts are known as oud (عود) in Arabic (literally "rod/stick") and used to describe agarwood in Arab countries.[20] Western perfumers also often use agarwood essential oil under the name "oud" or "oudh".[21]
  • In Europe it was referred to as Lignum aquila (eagle-wood) or Agilawood, from similarity to Tamil-Malayalam aghil'
  • In Indonesian and Malay, it is called "gaharu".
  • In The Philippines, it is known as Lapnisan.
  • In Papua New Guinea it is called "ghara" or eagle wood.[citation needed]
  • In Thai it is known as mai kritsana (ไม้กฤษณา).[22]
  • In Laos it is known as mai ketsana (ໄມ້ເກດສະໜາ).[23]
  • In Myanmar (Burmese), it is known as Thit Mhwae (သစ်မွှေး).

History

The odour of agarwood is complex and pleasing,[24] with few or no similar natural analogues. In the perfume state, the scent is mainly distinguished by a combination of "oriental-woody" and "very soft fruity-floral" notes. The incense smoke is also characterized by a "sweet-balsamic" note and "shades of vanilla and musk" and amber (not to be confused with ambergris).[6] As a result, agarwood and its essential oil gained great cultural and religious significance in ancient civilizations around the world, being described as a fragrant product as early as 1400 BCE in the Vedas of India.[25]

In the Hebrew Bible, "trees of lign aloes" are mentioned in The Book of Numbers 24:6[26] and a perfume compounded of aloeswood, myrrh, and cassia is described in Psalms 45.[27]

Dioscorides in his book Materia Medica (65 CE) described several medical qualities of agarwood (Áγαλλοχου) and mentioned its use as an incense. Even though Dioscorides describes agarwood as having an astringent and bitter taste, it was used to freshen the breath when chewed or as a decoction held in the mouth. He also writes that a root extract was used to treat stomach complaints and dysentery as well as pains of the lungs and liver.[3] Agarwood's use as a medicinal product was also recorded in the Sahih Muslim, which dates back to approximately the eighth century, and in the Ayurvedic medicinal text the Susruta Samhita.[28]

As early as the third century CE in ancient Viet Nam, the chronicle Nan zhou yi wu zhi (Strange things from the South) written by Wa Zhen of the Eastern Wu Dynasty mentioned agarwood produced in the Rinan commandery, now Central Vietnam, and how people collected it in the mountains.

 
Antique agarwood beads with inlaid gold, late Qing dynasty, China. Adilnor Collection, Sweden.

During the sixth century CE in Japan, in the recordings of the Nihon Shoki (The Chronicles of Japan) the second oldest book of classical Japanese history, mention is made of a large piece of fragrant wood identified as agarwood. The source for this piece of wood is claimed to be from Pursat, Cambodia (based on the smell of the wood). The famous piece of wood still remains in Japan today and is showcased less than 10 times per century at the Nara National Museum.

Agarwood is highly revered in Hinduism, Chinese Folk Religion and Islam.[3]

Starting in 1580 after Nguyễn Hoàng took control over the central provinces of modern Vietnam, he encouraged trade with other countries, specifically China and Japan. Agarwood was exported in three varieties: Calambac (kỳ nam in Vietnamese), trầm hương (very similar but slightly harder and slightly more abundant), and agarwood proper. A pound of Calambac bought in Hội An for 15 taels could be sold in Nagasaki for 600 taels. The Nguyễn Lords soon established a Royal Monopoly over the sale of Calambac. This monopoly helped fund the Nguyễn state finances during the early years of the Nguyen rule.[29] Accounts of international trade in agarwood date back as early as the thirteenth century, note India being one of the earliest sources of agarwood for foreign markets.[30]

Xuanzang's travelogues and the Harshacharita, written in seventh century AD in Northern India, mentions use of agarwood products such as 'Xasipat' (writing-material) and 'aloe-oil' in ancient Assam (Kamarupa). The tradition of making writing materials from its bark still exists in Assam.

It is to this day still used in traditional Chinese herbal medicince where it goes by the name of Chén Xiāng - 沉香 - Literally meaning 'sinking fragrance'. Its earlies recorded mention is from the Miscellaneous Records of Famous Physicians, 名医别录 , Ming Yi Bie Lu, ascribed to the author Táo Hǒng-Jǐng c.420-589.[31]

Formation

Production mode

There are seventeen species in the genus Aquilaria, large evergreens native to southeast Asia, and nine are known to produce agar wood.[32] In theory agarwood can be produced from all members; however, until recently it was primarily produced from A. malaccensis. A. agallocha and A. secundaria are synonyms for A. malaccensis.[1] A. crassna and A. sinensis are the other two members of the genus that are usually harvested. The gyrinops tree can also produce agarwood.[33]

 
Steam distillation process used to extract agarwood essential oils

Formation of agar wood occurs in the trunk and roots of trees that have been penetrated by an insect feeding on wood and oily resin, the Ambrosia beetle (Dinoplatypus chevrolati). A mold infection may then occur, and in response, the tree produces a salutary self-defense material to conceal damages or infections. While the unaffected wood of the tree is relatively light in color, the resin dramatically increases the mass and density of the affected wood, changing its color from a pale beige to yellow, orange, red, dark brown or black. In natural forests, only about 7 out of 100 Aquilaria trees of the same species are infected and produce aloes/agar wood. A common method in artificial forestry is to inoculate trees with the fungus. It produces a "damage sap" and is referred to as "fake" aloes/agar wood.[32]

Oud oil can be distilled from agar wood using steam; the total yield of oil for 70 kg of wood will not exceed 20 ml.[34][full citation needed]

Composition

The composition of agarwood oil is exceedingly complex with more than 150 chemical compounds identified.[5] At least 70 of these are terpenoids which come in the form of sesquiterpenes and chromones; no monoterpenes have been detected at all. Other common classes of compounds include agarofurans, cadinanes, eudesmanes, valencanes and eremophilanes, guaianes, prezizanes, vetispiranes, simple volatile aromatic compounds as well as a range of miscellaneous compounds.[5] The exact balance of these materials will vary depending on the age and species of tree as well as the exact details of the oil extraction process.

Perfumery

Oud has become a popular component in perfumery. Most brands have a creation based on or dedicated to "oud" or an accord of oud created through the use of certain chemical scent components. Few perfume houses use real oud in their creations. This is because oud is very expensive and potent. Oud is generally used as a base note and is traditionally pared with rose. Oud essential oil is available on the internet but care should be taken in chosing the vendor. Due to the fact that oud is such an expensive material there is a big market for diluting oud oil with patchouli or other chemical components.


Aquilaria species that produce agarwood

The following species of Aquilaria produce agarwood:[32]

*. Sri Lankan "agarwood" is known as Walla Patta and is of the Gyrinops walla species.

Conservation of agarwood-producing species

Overharvesting and habitat loss threatens some populations of agarwood-producing species. Concern over the impact of the global demand for agarwood has thus led to the inclusion of the main taxa on CITES Appendix II, which requires that international trade in agarwood be monitored. Monitoring is conducted by Cambridge-based TRAFFIC (a joint WWF and IUCN programme).[37] CITES also provides that international trade in agarwood be subject to controls designed to ensure that harvest and exports are not to the detriment of the survival of the species in the wild.

In addition, agarwood plantations have been established in a number of countries, and reintroduced into countries such as Malaysia and Sri Lanka as commercial plantation crops. The success of these plantations depends on the stimulation of agarwood production in the trees. Numerous inoculation techniques have been developed, with varying degrees of success.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Broad, S. (1995) "Agarwood harvesting in Vietnam" TRAFFIC Bulletin 15:96
  2. ^ a b CITES (25 April 2005) "Notification to the Parties" No. 2005/0025 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine. (PDF) . Retrieved on 22 July 2013.
  3. ^ a b c López-Sampson, Arlene; Page, Tony (20 March 2018). "History of Use and Trade of Agarwood" (PDF). Economic Botany. 72: 107–129. doi:10.1007/s12231-018-9408-4. ISSN 0013-0001. S2CID 49875414.
  4. ^ Andy Ash (27 August 2020). "First-grade agarwood can cost as much as $100,000 per kilogram. Why is it so expensive?". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Naef, Regula (March 2010). "The volatile and semi-volatile constituents of agarwood, the infected heartwood of Aquilaria species: a review". Flavour and Fragrance Journal. 26 (2): 73–87. doi:10.1002/ffj.2034.
  6. ^ a b Dinah Jung, The Value of Agarwood: Reflections upon its use and history in South Yemen, Universitätsbibliothel, Universität Heidelberg, 30 May 2011, (PDF) p. 4.
  7. ^ International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Life Sciences, 16 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine ISSN 2305-0330, Volume 2, Issue 1: January 2013)
  8. ^ Burrow, T., and M. B. Emeneau (1984). A Dravidian etymological dictionary (2 ed.). Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press. p. 4. Ta. akil (in cpds. akiṛ-) eagle-wood, Aquilaria agallocha; the drug agar obtained from the tree; akku eagle-wood. Ma. akil aloe wood, A. agallocha. Ka. agil the balsam tree which yields bdellium, Amyris agallocha; the dark species of Agallochum; fragrance. Tu. agilů a kind of tree; kari agilů Agallochum. / Cf. Skt. aguru-, agaru-; Pali akalu, akaḷu, agaru, agalu, agaḷu; Turner, CDIAL, no. 49. DED 14.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Turner, R. L. (Ralph Lilley), Sir (1962–66). A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages. London: Oxford University Press. p. 3. agaru m.n. ʻ fragrant Aloe -- tree and wood, Aquilaria agallocha ʼ lex., aguru -- R. [← Drav. Mayrhofer EWA i 17 with lit.] Pa. agalu -- , aggalu -- m., akalu -- m. ʻ a partic. ointment ʼ; Pk. agaru -- , agaluya -- , agaru(a) -- m.n. ʻ Aloe -- tree and wood ʼ; K. agara -- kāth ʻ sandal -- wood ʼ; S. agaru m. ʻ aloe ʼ, P. N. agar m., A. B. agaru, Or. agarū, H. agar, agur m.; G. agar, agru n. ʻ aloe or sandal -- wood ʼ; M. agar m.n. ʻ aloe ʼ, Si. ayal (agil ← Tam. akil).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Shulman, David (2016). Tamil: A biography. Harvard University Press. pp. 19–20. We have ahalim [in Hebrew], probably derived directly from Tamil akil rather than from Sanskrit aguru, itself a loan from the Tamil (Numbers 24.8; Proverbs 7.17; Song of Songs 4.14; Psalms 45.9--the latter two instances with the feminine plural form ahalot. Akil is, we think, native to South India, and it is thus not surprising that the word was borrowed by cultures that imported this plant.
  11. ^ Palmer, A. Smythe (1882) Folk Etymology
  12. ^ Panda, H. (1 January 2009). Aromatic Plants Cultivation, Processing And Uses. National Institute of Industrial Re. p. 182. ISBN 978-81-7833-057-0. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  13. ^ Pusey, Edward Bouverie (1885) Daniel the Prophet: Nine Lectures, Delivered in the Divinity School of the University of Oxford Funk & Wagnalls, New York, p. 515, OCLC 5577227
  14. ^ "Aguru" 7 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Sanskrit Dictionary from Bhaktivedanta VedaBase Network
  15. ^ Morita, Kiyoko (1999). The Book of Incense: Enjoying the Traditional Art of Japanese Scents. Kodansha USA. ISBN 978-4770023896.
  16. ^ Thứ Hai (9 April 2006) "kỳ nam và trầm hương" Tuổi Trẻ Online. Tuoitre.com.vn. Retrieved on 22 July 2013.
  17. ^ Persoon, G.A. "Agarwood: the life of a wounded tree". IIAS Newsletter. IIAS, Leiden. 45 (2007): 24–25.
  18. ^ Parfionovitch, Yuri; Dorje, Gyurme and Meyer, Fernand (1992) Tibetan medical paintings: illustrations to the Blue beryl treatise of Sangye Gyamtso (1653–1705) (English edition of Tibetan text & paintings) (2 volumes) Serindia, London, ISBN 0-906026-26-1
  19. ^ Aromatics, an encyclopedia. 2010. Please note: due to the method of assigning names to medicinal botanicals used in Tibet, it must be considered that woods with similar medicinal properties are named as varieties of the same medicine, and not according to anything akin to the nomenclature of Western botany. Tibetan botanical taxonomy is still in the earliest stage: "white aloeswood" actually refers to the non-aromatic portions of the Indian sandalwood tree; "yellow aloeswood" refers to the scented heartwood of Santalum album. Unique aloeswood is the highest grade of Aquilaria agallocha resin, known in English as Agallochum, while "black aloeswood" is the resin infused wood of the same tree; "brown aloeswood" is the scented wood of several Dalbergia species from India and Bhutan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  20. ^ Burfield, Tony (2005) "Agarwood Trading" 1 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Cropwatch Files, Cropwatch
  21. ^ Branch, Nathan (30 May 2009) "Dawn Spencer Hurwitz Oude Arabique (extrait)" Archived 6 September 2012 at archive.today (fashion and fragrance reviews)
  22. ^ "สำนักคุ้มครองภูมิปัญญาฯ" 25 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, page 1 (๑), in Thai
  23. ^ Hkum, Seng Hkum N and Maodee, M. (July 2005) "Marketing and Domestication of NTFPs in North Phonsali Three Districts" NPADP Presentation, NTFP MIS Workshop Luangprabang, North Phongsali Alternative Development Project, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
  24. ^ International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Life Sciences, ISSN 2305-0330, Volume 2, Issue 1: January 2013)
  25. ^ History of Use and Trade of Agarwood - Arlene López-Sampson & Tony (2018) https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12231-018-9408-4
  26. ^ Numbers 24:6, KJV
  27. ^ Psalms 45: "All thy garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces, whereby they have made thee glad."
  28. ^ Barden, Angela; Anak, Noorainie Awang; Mulliken, Teresa; Song, Michael (2000). Heart of the Matter: Agarwood Use and Trade and CITES Implementation for Aquilaria malaccensis (PDF). Cambridge, England: Traffic International. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-85850-177-2. (PDF) from the original on 23 November 2008.
  29. ^ Li, Tana (1998) Nguyễn Cochinchina: southern Vietnam in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Southeast Asia Program Publications, Ithaca, New York, p. 79, ISBN 0-87727-722-2
  30. ^ Ghosh, Sahana. "Facing extinction, India's scented agarwood is finding ways to grow in home gardens, polluted fields". scroll.in.
  31. ^ Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica Revised Edition by Dan Bensky (Author), Andrew Gamble (Compiler), ISBN 0939616157
  32. ^ a b c d Ng, L.T.; Chang Y.S.; Kadir, A.A. (1997). "A review on agar (gaharu) producing Aquilaria species". Journal of Tropical Forest Products. 2 (2): 272–285.
  33. ^ The genus Gyrinops, is closely related to Aquilaria and in the past all species were considered to belong to Aquilaria. Blanchette, Robert A. (2006) "Cultivated Agarwood – Training programs and Research in Papua New Guinea", Forest Pathology and Wood Microbiology Research Laboratory, Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota
  34. ^ Harris, 1995
  35. ^ "Aquilaria filaria". Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN). Agricultural Research Service (ARS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  36. ^ "Aquilaria hirta". Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN). Agricultural Research Service (ARS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  37. ^ Lim, Teckwyn; Awang Anak, Noorainie (2010). Wood for the Trees: A review of the agarwood (gaharu) trade in Malaysia (PDF). Petaling Jaya: TRAFFIC Southeast Asia. p. 108.

Further reading

Snelder, Denyse J.; Lasco, Rodel D. (29 September 2008). Smallholder Tree Growing for Rural Development and Environmental Services: Lessons from Asia. シュプリンガー・ジャパン株式会社. p. 248 ff. ISBN 978-1-4020-8260-3. Retrieved 8 October 2010.

Jung, Dr. Dinah (1 January 2013). The cultural biography of agarwood (PDF). University of Heidelberg: HeiDOK: Journal article: JRAS. pp. 103–125. Retrieved 30 October 2016.

External links

  •   Media related to Agarwood at Wikimedia Commons
  • Etymology of agarwood and aloe
  • "Sustainable Agarwood Production in Aquilaria Trees" at the University of Minnesota
  • Traditional and Medicinal Uses of Aquilaria / Agarwood
  • expensive material, BusinessInsider; video.

agarwood, confused, with, agalloch, aloes, redirects, here, other, uses, aloe, disambiguation, aloeswood, eaglewood, gharuwood, fragrant, dark, resinous, wood, used, incense, perfume, small, carvings, this, resinous, wood, most, commonly, referred, oudh, forme. Not to be confused with Agalloch Aloes redirects here For other uses see aloe disambiguation Agarwood aloeswood eaglewood or gharuwood is a fragrant dark resinous wood used in incense perfume and small carvings This resinous wood is most commonly referred to as Oud or Oudh It is formed in the heartwood of aquilaria trees when the Acquilara Tree becomes infected with a type of mold Phialophora parasitica and secretes a resin to combat the mold Prior to infection the heartwood is odourless relatively light and pale coloured however as the infection progresses the tree produces a dark aromatic resin called aloes not to be confused with Aloe ferox the succulent commonly known as the bitter aloe or agar not to be confused with the edible algae derived agar as well as gaharu jinko oud or oodh aguru not to be confused with bukhoor in response to the attack which results in a very dense dark resin embedded heartwood The resin embedded wood is valued in East and South Asian cultures for its distinctive fragrance and thus is used for incense and perfumes Cultivated aloes agar wood Uninfected aquilaria wood lacking the dark resin One of the main reasons for the relative rarity and high cost of agarwood is the depletion of the wild resource 1 Since 1995 Aquilaria malaccensis the primary source has been listed in Appendix II potentially threatened species by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora 2 In 2004 all Aquilaria species were listed in Appendix II however a number of countries have outstanding reservations regarding that listing 2 The aromatic qualities of agarwood are influenced by the species geographic location its branch trunk and root origin length of time since infection and methods of harvesting and processing 3 First grade agarwood is one of the most expensive natural raw materials in the world 4 with 2010 prices for superior pure material as high as US 100 000 kg although in practice adulteration of the wood and oil is common allowing for prices as low as US 100 kg 5 A whole range of qualities and products are on the market varying in quality with geographical location botanical species the age of the specific tree cultural deposition and the section of the tree where the piece of agarwood stems from 6 As of 2013 update the current global market for agarwood is estimated to be in the range of US 6 8 billion and is growing rapidly 7 Contents 1 Denomination 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Vernacular names 2 History 3 Formation 3 1 Production mode 3 2 Composition 4 Perfumery 5 Aquilaria species that produce agarwood 6 Conservation of agarwood producing species 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDenomination EditEtymology Edit The word ultimately comes from one of the Dravidian languages 8 9 probably from Tamil அக ல agil 10 Vernacular names Edit Aquilaria tree showing darker agarwood Poachers had scraped off the bark to allow the tree to become infected by the ascomycetous mould Agarwood is known under many names in different cultures Another name is Lignum aloes or Aloeswood unrelated to the familiar genus Aloe Also from aghil via Hebrew and Greek 11 In Assamese it is called as xasi স চ 12 In Bengali agarwood is known as agor gach আগর গ ছ and the agarwood oil as agor ator আগর আতর In Odia it is called as agara ଅଗର In Cambodia it is called chann crassna The fragrance from this wood is called khloem chann ខ ល មច ន or khloem chann crassna khloem is hard wood chann crassna is the tree species Aquilaria crassna in the Khmer language In Hindi it is known as agar which is derived originally from the Sanskrit aguru 13 14 In Sinhala Agarwood producing Gyrinops walla tree is known as Walla Patta වල ල පට ට In Tamil it is called aghil அக ல though what was referred in ancient Tamil literature could well be Excoecaria agallocha In Telugu and Kannada it is known by the same Sanskrit name as Aguru It is known as Chenxiang 沉香 in Chinese Chimhyang 침향 in Korean Jinkō 沈香 in Japanese and trầm hương in Vietnamese all meaning deep scent and alluding to its intense scent In Japan there are several grades of Jinkō the highest of which is known as Kyara 伽羅 15 16 In Vietnam ancient texts also refer to the use of agarwood in relation to travelling Buddhist monks 17 In Tibetan it is known as ཨ ག ར a ga ru There are several varieties used in Tibetan Medicine unique eaglewood yellow eaglewood ཨ ག ར ས ར པ a ga ru ser po white eaglewood ཨར ས ar skya and black eaglewood ཨར ནག ar nag 18 19 Both agarwood and its resin distillate extracts are known as oud عود in Arabic literally rod stick and used to describe agarwood in Arab countries 20 Western perfumers also often use agarwood essential oil under the name oud or oudh 21 In Europe it was referred to as Lignum aquila eagle wood or Agilawood from similarity to Tamil Malayalam aghil In Indonesian and Malay it is called gaharu In The Philippines it is known as Lapnisan In Papua New Guinea it is called ghara or eagle wood citation needed In Thai it is known as mai kritsana imkvsna 22 In Laos it is known as mai ketsana ໄມ ເກດສະໜາ 23 In Myanmar Burmese it is known as Thit Mhwae သစ မ History EditThe odour of agarwood is complex and pleasing 24 with few or no similar natural analogues In the perfume state the scent is mainly distinguished by a combination of oriental woody and very soft fruity floral notes The incense smoke is also characterized by a sweet balsamic note and shades of vanilla and musk and amber not to be confused with ambergris 6 As a result agarwood and its essential oil gained great cultural and religious significance in ancient civilizations around the world being described as a fragrant product as early as 1400 BCE in the Vedas of India 25 In the Hebrew Bible trees of lign aloes are mentioned in The Book of Numbers 24 6 26 and a perfume compounded of aloeswood myrrh and cassia is described in Psalms 45 27 Dioscorides in his book Materia Medica 65 CE described several medical qualities of agarwood Agalloxoy and mentioned its use as an incense Even though Dioscorides describes agarwood as having an astringent and bitter taste it was used to freshen the breath when chewed or as a decoction held in the mouth He also writes that a root extract was used to treat stomach complaints and dysentery as well as pains of the lungs and liver 3 Agarwood s use as a medicinal product was also recorded in the Sahih Muslim which dates back to approximately the eighth century and in the Ayurvedic medicinal text the Susruta Samhita 28 As early as the third century CE in ancient Viet Nam the chronicle Nan zhou yi wu zhi Strange things from the South written by Wa Zhen of the Eastern Wu Dynasty mentioned agarwood produced in the Rinan commandery now Central Vietnam and how people collected it in the mountains Antique agarwood beads with inlaid gold late Qing dynasty China Adilnor Collection Sweden During the sixth century CE in Japan in the recordings of the Nihon Shoki The Chronicles of Japan the second oldest book of classical Japanese history mention is made of a large piece of fragrant wood identified as agarwood The source for this piece of wood is claimed to be from Pursat Cambodia based on the smell of the wood The famous piece of wood still remains in Japan today and is showcased less than 10 times per century at the Nara National Museum Agarwood is highly revered in Hinduism Chinese Folk Religion and Islam 3 Starting in 1580 after Nguyễn Hoang took control over the central provinces of modern Vietnam he encouraged trade with other countries specifically China and Japan Agarwood was exported in three varieties Calambac kỳ nam in Vietnamese trầm hương very similar but slightly harder and slightly more abundant and agarwood proper A pound of Calambac bought in Hội An for 15 taels could be sold in Nagasaki for 600 taels The Nguyễn Lords soon established a Royal Monopoly over the sale of Calambac This monopoly helped fund the Nguyễn state finances during the early years of the Nguyen rule 29 Accounts of international trade in agarwood date back as early as the thirteenth century note India being one of the earliest sources of agarwood for foreign markets 30 Xuanzang s travelogues and the Harshacharita written in seventh century AD in Northern India mentions use of agarwood products such as Xasipat writing material and aloe oil in ancient Assam Kamarupa The tradition of making writing materials from its bark still exists in Assam It is to this day still used in traditional Chinese herbal medicince where it goes by the name of Chen Xiang 沉香 Literally meaning sinking fragrance Its earlies recorded mention is from the Miscellaneous Records of Famous Physicians 名医别录 Ming Yi Bie Lu ascribed to the author Tao Hǒng Jǐng c 420 589 31 Formation EditProduction mode Edit There are seventeen species in the genus Aquilaria large evergreens native to southeast Asia and nine are known to produce agar wood 32 In theory agarwood can be produced from all members however until recently it was primarily produced from A malaccensis A agallocha and A secundaria are synonyms for A malaccensis 1 A crassna and A sinensis are the other two members of the genus that are usually harvested The gyrinops tree can also produce agarwood 33 Steam distillation process used to extract agarwood essential oils Formation of agar wood occurs in the trunk and roots of trees that have been penetrated by an insect feeding on wood and oily resin the Ambrosia beetle Dinoplatypus chevrolati A mold infection may then occur and in response the tree produces a salutary self defense material to conceal damages or infections While the unaffected wood of the tree is relatively light in color the resin dramatically increases the mass and density of the affected wood changing its color from a pale beige to yellow orange red dark brown or black In natural forests only about 7 out of 100 Aquilaria trees of the same species are infected and produce aloes agar wood A common method in artificial forestry is to inoculate trees with the fungus It produces a damage sap and is referred to as fake aloes agar wood 32 Oud oil can be distilled from agar wood using steam the total yield of oil for 70 kg of wood will not exceed 20 ml 34 full citation needed Composition Edit The composition of agarwood oil is exceedingly complex with more than 150 chemical compounds identified 5 At least 70 of these are terpenoids which come in the form of sesquiterpenes and chromones no monoterpenes have been detected at all Other common classes of compounds include agarofurans cadinanes eudesmanes valencanes and eremophilanes guaianes prezizanes vetispiranes simple volatile aromatic compounds as well as a range of miscellaneous compounds 5 The exact balance of these materials will vary depending on the age and species of tree as well as the exact details of the oil extraction process Perfumery EditOud has become a popular component in perfumery Most brands have a creation based on or dedicated to oud or an accord of oud created through the use of certain chemical scent components Few perfume houses use real oud in their creations This is because oud is very expensive and potent Oud is generally used as a base note and is traditionally pared with rose Oud essential oil is available on the internet but care should be taken in chosing the vendor Due to the fact that oud is such an expensive material there is a big market for diluting oud oil with patchouli or other chemical components Aquilaria species that produce agarwood EditThe following species of Aquilaria produce agarwood 32 Aquilaria acuminata found in Papua New Guinea Indonesia amp Philippines Aquilaria apiculata found in Philippines Aquilaria baillonil found in Thailand and Cambodia Aquilaria banaensae found in Vietnam Aquilaria beccariana found in Indonesia Aquilaria brachyantha found in Malaysia Aquilaria crassna found in Cambodia Malaysia Thailand Laos and Vietnam Aquilaria cumingiana found in Indonesia and Malaysia Aquilaria filaria found in New Guinea the Moluccas and Mindanao Philippines 35 Aquilaria grandiflora found in China Aquilaria hirta found in Thailand Indonesia and Malaysia 36 Aquilaria khasiana found in Bangladesh and India Aquilaria malaccensis found in Indonesia Malaysia Laos Thailand and India Aquilaria microcarpa found in Indonesia and Malaysia Aquilaria rostrata found in Malaysia Aquilaria sinensis found in China and Laos Aquilaria subintegra found in Thailand Sri Lankan agarwood is known as Walla Patta and is of the Gyrinops walla species Conservation of agarwood producing species EditOverharvesting and habitat loss threatens some populations of agarwood producing species Concern over the impact of the global demand for agarwood has thus led to the inclusion of the main taxa on CITES Appendix II which requires that international trade in agarwood be monitored Monitoring is conducted by Cambridge based TRAFFIC a joint WWF and IUCN programme 37 CITES also provides that international trade in agarwood be subject to controls designed to ensure that harvest and exports are not to the detriment of the survival of the species in the wild In addition agarwood plantations have been established in a number of countries and reintroduced into countries such as Malaysia and Sri Lanka as commercial plantation crops The success of these plantations depends on the stimulation of agarwood production in the trees Numerous inoculation techniques have been developed with varying degrees of success 32 See also EditIncense in India SandalwoodReferences Edit a b Broad S 1995 Agarwood harvesting in Vietnam TRAFFIC Bulletin 15 96 a b CITES 25 April 2005 Notification to the Parties No 2005 0025 Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved on 22 July 2013 a b c Lopez Sampson Arlene Page Tony 20 March 2018 History of Use and Trade of Agarwood PDF Economic Botany 72 107 129 doi 10 1007 s12231 018 9408 4 ISSN 0013 0001 S2CID 49875414 Andy Ash 27 August 2020 First grade agarwood can cost as much as 100 000 per kilogram Why is it so expensive Business Insider Retrieved 17 September 2020 a b c Naef Regula March 2010 The volatile and semi volatile constituents of agarwood the infected heartwood of Aquilaria species a review Flavour and Fragrance Journal 26 2 73 87 doi 10 1002 ffj 2034 a b Dinah Jung The Value of Agarwood Reflections upon its use and history in South Yemen Universitatsbibliothel Universitat Heidelberg 30 May 2011 PDF p 4 International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Life Sciences Archived 16 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine ISSN 2305 0330 Volume 2 Issue 1 January 2013 Burrow T and M B Emeneau 1984 A Dravidian etymological dictionary 2 ed Oxfordshire Oxford University Press p 4 Ta akil in cpds akiṛ eagle wood Aquilaria agallocha the drug agar obtained from the tree akku eagle wood Ma akil aloe wood A agallocha Ka agil the balsam tree which yields bdellium Amyris agallocha the dark species of Agallochum fragrance Tu agilu a kind of tree kari agilu Agallochum Cf Skt aguru agaru Pali akalu akaḷu agaru agalu agaḷu Turner CDIAL no 49 DED 14 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Turner R L Ralph Lilley Sir 1962 66 A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo Aryan Languages London Oxford University Press p 3 agaru m n ʻ fragrant Aloe tree and wood Aquilaria agallocha ʼ lex aguru R Drav Mayrhofer EWA i 17 with lit Pa agalu aggalu m akalu m ʻ a partic ointment ʼ Pk agaru agaluya agaru a m n ʻ Aloe tree and wood ʼ K agara kath ʻ sandal wood ʼ S agaru m ʻ aloe ʼ P N agar m A B agaru Or agaru H agar agur m G agar agru n ʻ aloe or sandal wood ʼ M agar m n ʻ aloe ʼ Si ayal agil Tam akil a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shulman David 2016 Tamil A biography Harvard University Press pp 19 20 We have ahalim in Hebrew probably derived directly from Tamil akil rather than from Sanskrit aguru itself a loan from the Tamil Numbers 24 8 Proverbs 7 17 Song of Songs 4 14 Psalms 45 9 the latter two instances with the feminine plural form ahalot Akil is we think native to South India and it is thus not surprising that the word was borrowed by cultures that imported this plant Palmer A Smythe 1882 Folk Etymology Panda H 1 January 2009 Aromatic Plants Cultivation Processing And Uses National Institute of Industrial Re p 182 ISBN 978 81 7833 057 0 Retrieved 8 October 2010 Pusey Edward Bouverie 1885 Daniel the Prophet Nine Lectures Delivered in the Divinity School of the University of Oxford Funk amp Wagnalls New York p 515 OCLC 5577227 Aguru Archived 7 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Sanskrit Dictionary from Bhaktivedanta VedaBase Network Morita Kiyoko 1999 The Book of Incense Enjoying the Traditional Art of Japanese Scents Kodansha USA ISBN 978 4770023896 Thứ Hai 9 April 2006 kỳ nam va trầm hương Tuổi Trẻ Online Tuoitre com vn Retrieved on 22 July 2013 Persoon G A Agarwood the life of a wounded tree IIAS Newsletter IIAS Leiden 45 2007 24 25 Parfionovitch Yuri Dorje Gyurme and Meyer Fernand 1992 Tibetan medical paintings illustrations to the Blue beryl treatise of Sangye Gyamtso 1653 1705 English edition of Tibetan text amp paintings 2 volumes Serindia London ISBN 0 906026 26 1 Aromatics an encyclopedia 2010 Please note due to the method of assigning names to medicinal botanicals used in Tibet it must be considered that woods with similar medicinal properties are named as varieties of the same medicine and not according to anything akin to the nomenclature of Western botany Tibetan botanical taxonomy is still in the earliest stage white aloeswood actually refers to the non aromatic portions of the Indian sandalwood tree yellow aloeswood refers to the scented heartwood of Santalum album Unique aloeswood is the highest grade of Aquilaria agallocha resin known in English as Agallochum while black aloeswood is the resin infused wood of the same tree brown aloeswood is the scented wood of several Dalbergia species from India and Bhutan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Burfield Tony 2005 Agarwood Trading Archived 1 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Cropwatch Files Cropwatch Branch Nathan 30 May 2009 Dawn Spencer Hurwitz Oude Arabique extrait Archived 6 September 2012 at archive today fashion and fragrance reviews sankkhumkhrxngphumipyya Archived 25 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine page 1 1 in Thai Hkum Seng Hkum N and Maodee M July 2005 Marketing and Domestication of NTFPs in North Phonsali Three Districts NPADP Presentation NTFP MIS Workshop Luangprabang North Phongsali Alternative Development Project United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Life Sciences ISSN 2305 0330 Volume 2 Issue 1 January 2013 History of Use and Trade of Agarwood Arlene Lopez Sampson amp Tony 2018 https link springer com article 10 1007 s12231 018 9408 4 Numbers 24 6 KJV Psalms 45 All thy garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palaces whereby they have made thee glad Barden Angela Anak Noorainie Awang Mulliken Teresa Song Michael 2000 Heart of the Matter Agarwood Use and Trade and CITES Implementation forAquilaria malaccensis PDF Cambridge England Traffic International p 7 ISBN 978 1 85850 177 2 Archived PDF from the original on 23 November 2008 Li Tana 1998 Nguyễn Cochinchina southern Vietnam in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Southeast Asia Program Publications Ithaca New York p 79 ISBN 0 87727 722 2 Ghosh Sahana Facing extinction India s scented agarwood is finding ways to grow in home gardens polluted fields scroll in Chinese Herbal Medicine Materia Medica Revised Edition by Dan Bensky Author Andrew Gamble Compiler ISBN 0939616157 a b c d Ng L T Chang Y S Kadir A A 1997 A review on agar gaharu producing Aquilaria species Journal of Tropical Forest Products 2 2 272 285 The genus Gyrinops is closely related to Aquilaria and in the past all species were considered to belong to Aquilaria Blanchette Robert A 2006 Cultivated Agarwood Training programs and Research in Papua New Guinea Forest Pathology and Wood Microbiology Research Laboratory Department of Plant Pathology University of Minnesota Harris 1995 Aquilaria filaria Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN Agricultural Research Service ARS United States Department of Agriculture USDA Retrieved 22 July 2013 Aquilaria hirta Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN Agricultural Research Service ARS United States Department of Agriculture USDA Retrieved 22 July 2013 Lim Teckwyn Awang Anak Noorainie 2010 Wood for the Trees A review of the agarwood gaharu trade in Malaysia PDF Petaling Jaya TRAFFIC Southeast Asia p 108 Further reading EditSnelder Denyse J Lasco Rodel D 29 September 2008 Smallholder Tree Growing for Rural Development and Environmental Services Lessons from Asia シュプリンガー ジャパン株式会社 p 248 ff ISBN 978 1 4020 8260 3 Retrieved 8 October 2010 Jung Dr Dinah 1 January 2013 The cultural biography of agarwood PDF University of Heidelberg HeiDOK Journal article JRAS pp 103 125 Retrieved 30 October 2016 External links Edit Media related to Agarwood at Wikimedia Commons Hong Kong herbarium factsheet of Aquilaria sinensis Etymology of agarwood and aloe Sustainable Agarwood Production in Aquilaria Trees at the University of Minnesota Traditional and Medicinal Uses of Aquilaria Agarwood The Cropwatch Files expensive material BusinessInsider video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Agarwood amp oldid 1127579659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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