sandalwood
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- CORE - SANDALWOOD AS A COMPONENT OF AGROFORESTRY: EXPLORATION OF PARASITISM AND COMPETITION WITH THE WaNuLCAS MODEL
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Re-discovering Sandalwood: Beyond Beauty and Fragrance
- Drugs.com - Sandalwood
- PetMD - Borzoi
- University of Florida IFAS Extension - Manchineel
- Academia - Sandalwood: history, uses, present status and the future
- Related Topics:
- wood
- Santalaceae
- quandong
- aromatic sandalwood
- Xuan paper
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sandalwood, (genus Santalum), genus of about 25 species of semiparasitic plants of the family Santalaceae, especially the fragrant wood of the true, or white, sandalwood, Santalum album. The group is distributed throughout southeastern Asia, Australia, and islands of the South Pacific.
True sandalwood
A true sandalwood tree grows to a height of about 10 metres (33 feet); has leathery leaves in pairs, each opposite the other on the branch; and is partially parasitic on the roots of other tree species. Both tree and roots contain a yellow aromatic oil, called sandalwood oil, the odour of which persists for years in such articles as ornamental boxes, furniture, and fans made of the white sapwood. The oil is obtained by steam distillation of the wood and is used in perfumes, soaps, candles, incense, and folk medicines. Powdered sandalwood is used in the paste applied to make Brahman caste marks and in sachets for scenting clothes.
Sandalwood trees have been cultivated since antiquity for their yellowish heartwood, which plays a major role in many funeral ceremonies and religious rites. The trees are slow-growing, usually taking about 30 years for the heartwood to reach an economically useful thickness.
Other species
Quandong (S. acuminatum), noted for its edible nut, and plumbush (S. lanceolatum) are both fairly common trees in Australia. Bitter quandong (S. murrayanum) is found in shrublands in southern Australia.
Several members of the genus are listed as endangered in the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species, including Polynesian sandalwood (S. insulare), lanai sandalwood (S. freycinetianum) and ‘iliahi (S. pyrularium) of Hawaii, and yasi (S. yasi) of Fiji and Tonga. The Hawaiian S. involutum and S. macgregorii of Papua New Guinea are both critically endangered. The Chile sandalwood (S. fernandezianum) is an extinct species last documented alive in Chile in 1908. Habitat loss and overharvesting for the wood are the chief threats to these plants.
So-called red sandalwood is obtained from the reddish-coloured wood of Pterocarpus santalinus, a Southeast Asian tree of the pea family (Fabaceae). This species may have been the source of the sandalwood used in King Solomon’s Temple.