Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective

Sandalwood is a commercially and culturally important plant species belonging to the familySantalaceae and the genus Santalum. Sandalwood oil extracted from the heartwood has been used forperfumery, medicinal, religious and cultural purposes over centuries of years. In addition to oil, the woodand i...

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Main Author: S.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Sri Jayewardenepura 2013-04-01
Series:Journal of Tropical Forestry and Environment
Online Access:http://journals.sjp.ac.lk/index.php/JTFE/article/view/1117
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spelling doaj-0e95915076554b0da6c4b572bc73c3712020-11-24T23:20:27ZengUniversity of Sri JayewardenepuraJournal of Tropical Forestry and Environment2235-93702235-93622013-04-0131991Sandalwood Research: A Global PerspectiveS.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe0Department of Forestry and Environment Science, University of Sri JayewardenepuraSandalwood is a commercially and culturally important plant species belonging to the familySantalaceae and the genus Santalum. Sandalwood oil extracted from the heartwood has been used forperfumery, medicinal, religious and cultural purposes over centuries of years. In addition to oil, the woodand its powder are used for religious, cultural and medicinal purposes especially in the Asian and Arabregions. There are around 18 sandalwood species belonging to the genus Santalum which are; S.freycinetianum, S. haleakalae, S. ellipticum, S. peniculatum, S. pyrularium, S. involutum, S. boninese, S.insulare, S. austrocaledonicum, S. yasi, S. macgregorii, S. accuminatum, S. murrayanum, S. obtusifolium,S. lanceolatum, S. fernandezianum, S. salicifolium and S. spicatum. All the sandalwood species areidentified as obligate wood hemi-parasites which means they absorb certain nutrients such as phosphatesand nitrates from the host trees via root connections called haustoria.http://journals.sjp.ac.lk/index.php/JTFE/article/view/1117
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe
spellingShingle S.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe
Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
Journal of Tropical Forestry and Environment
author_facet S.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe
author_sort S.M.C.U.P. Subasinghe
title Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
title_short Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
title_full Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
title_fullStr Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Sandalwood Research: A Global Perspective
title_sort sandalwood research: a global perspective
publisher University of Sri Jayewardenepura
series Journal of Tropical Forestry and Environment
issn 2235-9370
2235-9362
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Sandalwood is a commercially and culturally important plant species belonging to the familySantalaceae and the genus Santalum. Sandalwood oil extracted from the heartwood has been used forperfumery, medicinal, religious and cultural purposes over centuries of years. In addition to oil, the woodand its powder are used for religious, cultural and medicinal purposes especially in the Asian and Arabregions. There are around 18 sandalwood species belonging to the genus Santalum which are; S.freycinetianum, S. haleakalae, S. ellipticum, S. peniculatum, S. pyrularium, S. involutum, S. boninese, S.insulare, S. austrocaledonicum, S. yasi, S. macgregorii, S. accuminatum, S. murrayanum, S. obtusifolium,S. lanceolatum, S. fernandezianum, S. salicifolium and S. spicatum. All the sandalwood species areidentified as obligate wood hemi-parasites which means they absorb certain nutrients such as phosphatesand nitrates from the host trees via root connections called haustoria.
url http://journals.sjp.ac.lk/index.php/JTFE/article/view/1117
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