Sustainable harvesting methods (minimizing tree stress) 

1. Principles of Sustainable Harvesting

  • Preserve tree health: Avoid excessive wounding or removing too much resin at once.
  • Allow recovery cycles: Give trees time to heal before the next induction.
  • Selective harvesting: Only collect mature resin while leaving the tree alive.
  • Maintain plantation productivity: Combine harvesting with good care practices (fertilization, irrigation, pest management).

2. Methods of Sustainable Harvesting

  • A. Partial Harvesting
  • Remove only resin-rich portions of wood from inoculated sites.
  • Leave some resin or surrounding wood intact for future resin formation.
  • Use sharp, clean tools to reduce unnecessary tissue damage.
  • B. Incremental / Layered Harvesting
  • Harvest resin in layers over time rather than removing all resin at once.
  • Allows tree to regenerate resin for subsequent cycles.
  • Best for high-value, large trees where multiple harvests are feasible.
  • C. Minimal Wounding
  • Avoid creating new wounds at the same site immediately after harvest.
  • Space wounds 30–50 cm apart and rotate sites to reduce stress.
  • Seal harvested wounds with paraffin wax, tree wound paste, or sterile cotton to prevent infection.
  • D. Mechanical + Biological Combination
  • If using mechanical or fungal induction, harvest after resin is mature, not during early formation.
  • Avoid over-harvesting induced areas; leave some resin for ongoing defense response.

3. Post-Harvest Tree Care

  • Irrigation: Maintain consistent soil moisture to reduce stress.
  • Fertilization: Apply organic fertilizers or compost tea to support recovery.
  • Pest & Disease Management: Monitor for secondary infections at harvest sites.
  • Wound Management: Seal harvested areas to prevent contamination and decay.

4. Timing Considerations

  • Harvest only mature resin: Typically 12–36 months after inoculation, depending on species and induction method.
  • Avoid repeated harvesting at the same site within a single resin cycle to prevent mortality.
  • Stagger harvests across a plantation to maintain continuous productivity without stressing all trees at once.

5. Benefits of Sustainable Harvesting

BenefitDescription
Tree longevityTrees remain productive for multiple resin cycles.
Resin qualityMature, high-aroma resin is prioritized.
Environmental stewardshipPreserves tree canopy and soil integrity.
Economic efficiencyReduces loss from tree mortality or decay; allows multiple harvests over years.

6. Best Practices Summary

  1. Harvest only resin-rich, mature portions.
  2. Seal wounds after harvest to prevent infection.
  3. Rotate harvest sites to allow tree recovery.
  4. Provide post-harvest care: irrigation, organic fertilization, pest monitoring.
  5. Maintain records for each tree: inoculation date, harvest date, resin quantity and quality.