Induction intervals are the timing between resin induction events — mechanical wounding, microbial inoculation, or chemical application. Proper timing maximizes resin quality and prevents tree stress or death.
1. Why Induction Intervals Matter
- Trees need time to respond to stress
- Continuous or too-frequent induction → phytotoxicity, leaf drop, tree death
- Too long between inductions → slower resin accumulation
Balance is key: enough stress to form resin, but not so much that the tree dies.
2. Recommended Induction Intervals (Farmer-Friendly)
| Induction Type | Interval | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanical wounding (drilling, nailing) | 2–3 months between holes | Allows wound response and vascular healing |
| Microbial inoculation | 3–6 months per site | Continuous low-level infection maintains resin formation |
| Chemical elicitors (salts, acids, oxidizers, stress ions) | 1–2 months per site | Avoid overlapping multiple high doses |
| Combined / Hybrid induction | 2–3 months between rounds | Monitor tree health before next round |
3. Practical Tips
- Start small: test on a few trees first
- Monitor: check leaves, resin zone color, signs of stress
- Rotate sites: do not induce all sides of the trunk at once
- Wait for resin polymerization: harvesting too early reduces quality
4. Key Concept: “Rest and React”
- Rest: allow tree to heal and produce resin
- React: apply next induction when the tree is ready
- This approach avoids over-stressing the tree while maximizing resin zones
Farmer Key Message
“Patience beats haste: wait between inductions to let the tree defend itself and produce quality resin.”