2.3 Nursery management: propagation via seed, tissue culture, hardening

Below is a nursery-to-field–ready module designed for your Agarwood Cultivation & Sustainable Farming curriculum, farmer manuals, and CI-ASASE / Oud Academia training programs.


Nursery Management for Agarwood

Propagation via Seed • Tissue Culture • Hardening & Acclimatization


1. Role of the Nursery in Agarwood Success

Agarwood quality begins before field planting. Poor nursery practices lead to:

  • Weak root systems
  • Low survival rates
  • Poor resin induction response later

well-managed nursery ensures:

  • Uniform growth
  • Disease-free stock
  • Faster establishment
  • Higher long-term resin potential

2. Propagation via Seed (Primary Method)

2.1 Seed Source Selection (CRITICAL)

Recommended species

  • Aquilaria malaccensis
  • A. crassna
  • A. sinensis

Seed source requirements

  • From registered mother trees
  • Known provenance
  • High vigor, disease-free
  • Prefer trees ≥8 years old

⚠️ Seeds are recalcitrant (short-lived).


2.2 Seed Viability & Handling

ParameterStandard
Viability period7–14 days
StorageMoist, shaded
Temperature20–25°C
MoistureNever dry out

Best practice: sow within 48–72 hours of harvest.


2.3 Seed Pre-treatment

  • Remove fruit pulp
  • Wash with clean water
  • Optional: soak 12 hours in:
    • Trichoderma solution (biocontrol)
    • Mild fungicide (nursery only)

2.4 Germination Medium

Recommended mix

  • 40% river sand
  • 40% coco coir
  • 20% compost / vermicast

pH: 5.5–6.5
Drainage: excellent


2.5 Germination Conditions

FactorRequirement
Shade50–60%
WateringFine mist
Germination time7–21 days
Success rate70–90%

2.6 Transplanting to Polybags

Timing: 2–3 true leaves

Polybags

  • Size: 6″ × 8″ or 8″ × 10″
  • Drain holes essential

Potting mix

  • 40% topsoil
  • 30% compost
  • 20% sand
  • 10% rice hull / biochar

3. Propagation via Tissue Culture (Advanced / Commercial)

3.1 Why Tissue Culture?

  • Uniform genetics
  • Disease-free stock
  • Rapid multiplication
  • Ideal for elite resin-producing lines

Used for:

  • Large estates
  • ESG / carbon projects
  • Export-compliant plantations

3.2 Tissue Culture Methods

MethodApplication
OrganogenesisShoot regeneration
Somatic embryogenesisMass propagation
Nodal cultureClone elite trees

(Aligned with COPI–CvSU protocols)


3.3 Acclimatization from Lab to Nursery

Stages

  1. Culture vessel → humidity chamber
  2. Mist chamber (2–4 weeks)
  3. Shade house (50–60%)
  4. Polybag transfer

Key risks

  • Transplant shock
  • Fungal attack
  • Sudden humidity drop

3.4 Success Factors

  • Gradual humidity reduction
  • Sterile potting mix
  • Biocontrol inoculation
  • Shade management

4. Hardening & Acclimatization (MOST CRITICAL)

4.1 Purpose of Hardening

Hardening trains seedlings to:

  • Withstand sun
  • Resist wind
  • Tolerate water stress
  • Adapt to field microbes

4.2 Hardening Schedule (Standard)

StageShadeDuration
Early nursery50–60%2–3 months
Mid hardening30–40%2–4 weeks
Final hardening10–20%2–3 weeks

4.3 Water Management During Hardening

  • Gradually reduce watering frequency
  • Avoid wilting
  • Encourage deep root growth

4.4 Root Development Indicators

Ready for field planting when:

  • White fibrous roots visible
  • No root circling
  • Strong upright stem
  • Height: 30–50 cm

5. Nutrition & Bio-Inoculation (Optional but Recommended)

5.1 Organic Feeding

  • Vermicast tea (1:10)
  • Seaweed extract (low dose)
  • Avoid excess nitrogen

5.2 Beneficial Microbes

  • Mycorrhizae (root dip)
  • Trichoderma (soil drench)
  • PGPR inoculants

⚠️ Do not inoculate with resin-inducing fungi at nursery stage.


6. Pest & Disease Management (Nursery)

Common Problems

  • Damping-off
  • Root rot
  • Leaf miners
  • Aphids

Preventive Measures

  • Good drainage
  • Proper spacing
  • Biological control
  • Sanitation

7. Nursery Record-Keeping (Compliance & ESG)

Maintain:

  • Seed source records
  • Germination rates
  • Mortality rates
  • Batch tagging
  • Tissue culture lot numbers

Essential for:

  • CITES traceability
  • Carbon projects
  • Investor audits

8. Common Nursery Mistakes

❌ Using old/dried seeds
❌ Overwatering
❌ No hardening phase
❌ Excess fertilizer
❌ Mixing nursery & field pathogens


9. Recommended Nursery Outputs

Nursery TypePlant Age
Smallholder4–6 months
Estate-scale6–8 months
Carbon / ESG8–10 months

10. Key Takeaways

  • Seed freshness determines success
  • Tissue culture is for scale & uniformity
  • Hardening decides field survival
  • Nursery quality = future resin quality

Optional Next Modules

  • 🌱 Nursery SOP checklist (printable)
  • 🧪 Tissue culture facility layout
  • 🌳 Field transplanting SOP
  • 📊 Costing & ROI of nursery operations
  • 🧭 TESDA NC-aligned nursery competency standards

Just tell me which one you want, and I’ll align it for Crown Agroforestry / Oud Academia / COPI rollout.