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Published: 23 September 2013

‘Metabolic engineering’ for sustainable sandalwood oil production in Australia


Sandalwood oil is one of the world's most valuable essential oils, but increased demand has caused natural populations of sandalwood trees to diminish over the past century through harvesting, grazing animals and disease.

Exotic sandalwood tree in Australia: the new technology will mean producers will not have to rely on slow-maturing heartwood.
Exotic sandalwood tree in Australia: the new technology will mean producers will not have to rely on slow-maturing heartwood.
Credit: John Moss/Wikimedia Commons

Plantations of several sandalwood (Santalum) species provide a more sustainable alternative to traditional wild harvesting but the long maturation requirement for heartwood to be produced within a tree hampers oil productivity.

A solution with significant implications for the Australian sandalwood industry and for conservation of wild Australian sandalwood has been found through gene discovery.

Key genes that produce sandalwood oil have been identified by an international research team from The University of Western Australia (UWA) and the University of British Columbia in Canada. These genes, together with previous gene discoveries, produce some of the final constituents of the oil found in Indian sandalwood trees.

‘These results provide a foundation for the production of sandalwood oil by means of metabolic engineering,’ said UWA's Dr Liz Barbour, one of the co-authors of the paper.

‘Presently sandalwood oil, extracted from the heartwood in tree stems and roots, is highly sought after by the fragrance and perfume industry. This discovery will open new markets,’ she said.

The research was partly funded by the Western Australian Forest Products Commission, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and an industrial partner.

Historically, the harvest and export of Western Australia's native sandalwood S. spicatum was vital to the State's early economy. It is suggested that the wheatbelt was settled faster because of revenue generated by local sandalwood harvesting.

Today, the industry is reviving as farmers replant native sandalwood as a land restoration strategy while exploring the possibility of benefitting from oil production.

Source: UWA






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