Here’s a comprehensive technical overview and growers’ guide for Sandalwood (Santalum spp.), including agroforestry integration and SC-CO₂ oil applications — aligned with your existing Nutmeg, Agarwood, Elemi portfoliofor CAPI/COPI operations.
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1 — Overview
- Scientific name: Santalum album (Indian Sandalwood), Santalum spicatum (Australian Sandalwood)
- Family: Santalaceae
- Origin: India, Southeast Asia, Australia
- Products: Heartwood, essential oil, powder, cosmetic extracts
- Economic importance: High-value timber and oil crop; perfumery, aromatherapy, medicinal uses
2 — Climate & Soil Requirements
- Temperature: 25–35°C optimal
- Rainfall: 500–1,200 mm/year (well-drained soils); drought-tolerant once established
- Soil: Sandy, loamy, well-drained soils; pH 6–7.5
- Altitude: Sea level to 1,000 m
Key Note: Sandalwood is semi-parasitic; requires host plants for optimal growth in early years (legumes, coffee, or Nutmeg in agroforestry systems).
3 — Propagation
3.1 Seed Propagation
- Collect mature seeds (brown, fully ripe)
- Remove pulp, soak 24–48 h in water to break dormancy
- Germination: 4–12 weeks, maintain 25–30°C, light shade
- Pre-germination treatment: Gibberellic acid (GA₃) 500 ppm may enhance germination
3.2 Vegetative Propagation
- Air layering: Limited success
- Stem cuttings: Low success, enhanced with auxins
- Tissue culture / organogenesis (COPI R&D): Shoot apices or nodal segments for clonal elite chemotypes
4 — Nursery Management
- Potting mix: Sand:loam:compost (1:1:1)
- Watering: Maintain moderate moisture; avoid waterlogging
- Fertilization: NPK + organic matter; avoid excessive nitrogen (promotes leaf growth over oil accumulation)
- Host integration: Grow seedlings near host plants (legumes like Sesbania, Erythrina) for early parasitic root connections
5 — Planting & Agroforestry Integration
- Spacing: 3–5 m × 3–5 m (400–1,100 trees/ha)
- Host trees: Legumes, Nutmeg, Agarwood, or Elemi for early growth support
- Agroforestry model:
- Top canopy: Nutmeg (or Elemi)
- Mid-layer: Agarwood (if intercropped)
- Understory / scattered: Sandalwood (parasitic seedlings attach to host roots)
- Benefits: Shade regulation, diversified revenue streams, improved soil fertility
6 — Fertilization & Soil Management
- Sandalwood prefers low nutrient soils; moderate NPK helps establish growth
- Organic compost improves soil structure
- Host trees provide additional nutrient support via root parasitism
7 — Irrigation
- Young trees: 2–3 times/week during dry season
- Mature trees: Tolerant to seasonal drought; minimal irrigation required
8 — Pruning & Canopy Management
- Minimal pruning needed for heartwood accumulation
- Thin crossing branches only; maintain access for host root connections
- Target: Promote long straight bole for timber and essential oil
9 — Flowering & Fruit
- Flowering: 6–8 years (seed-grown), 4–5 years (grafted/tissue-cultured)
- Fruits: Small drupes; bird dispersal
- Seed production: Used for propagation and reforestation
10 — Harvesting
- Timber harvest: 15–20 years for commercial heartwood
- Essential oil: Heartwood oil yield 2–5% of dry wood
- SC-CO₂ extraction: High-quality oil fraction suitable for perfumery, aligns with CESI operations
11 — Pest & Disease Management
- Pests: Scale insects, stem borers
- Diseases: Root rot, fungal infections
- Integrated pest management and healthy host tree interactions reduce issues
12 — Postharvest & Oil Processing
- Wood processing: Chip or powder for oil extraction
- SC-CO₂ extraction: Maintains aroma integrity, yields fractionated oil
- Oil uses: Luxury perfumery, cosmetics, aromatherapy, spa products
13 — Yield & Productivity
- Heartwood yield: 30–50 kg/tree (mature)
- Essential oil yield: 2–5% of heartwood weight
- ROI: Long-term, but high-value product
- Suitable for integration with Nutmeg and Agarwood for staggered harvest and revenue diversification
14 — Sustainability & Certification
- Sustainable harvesting critical due to endangered status (CITES Appendix II for S. album)
- Track provenance and chemotype for SC-CO₂ oil extraction
- Agroforestry model promotes biodiversity and carbon sequestration
If you want, I can now create a full “Sandalwood + Nutmeg + Agarwood” integrated agroforestry model with visual layout, staggered harvest timeline, and financial projections, similar to what we did for Nutmeg + Agarwood.
Do you want me to make that next?
