Phytotoxicity = damage to the tree caused by too much stress, chemicals, or improper treatment. In agarwood induction, it is one of the biggest risks when using chemicals, minerals, or microbial inoculants.
1. What Causes Phytotoxicity?
- Excess chemical elicitors
- Too strong acids, oxidizers, or salts
- Overuse of stress ions
- Manganese, iron, calcium, zinc above safe levels
- Over-wounding
- Too many holes, deep drilling, or large bark removal
- Inappropriate microbial inoculation
- Harmful fungi or bacteria, high concentration
- Combination errors
- Using multiple stressors without proper timing
2. Symptoms of Phytotoxicity
| Symptom | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Leaf drop | Tree is under extreme stress |
| Brown or black lesions | Tissue necrosis |
| Rotting wood | Infection has overwhelmed defense |
| Wilting or crown dieback | Tree may die if untreated |
| Weak resin formation | Defense system compromised |
3. Why Phytotoxicity Happens
- Defense system overload → tree cannot cope
- Excess chemicals → burn cambium and xylem
- Improper microbial strains → uncontrolled infection
Result: low-quality resin, reduced yield, or tree death
4. How to Avoid Phytotoxicity
✔ Use low, tested doses of chemicals and ions
✔ Apply controlled wounding (drill depth, spacing, orientation)
✔ Use trusted microbial strains only
✔ Avoid overlapping multiple stressors at the same time
✔ Monitor tree health regularly
5. Farmer Key Message
“Too much stress kills the tree — resin forms only if the tree can survive.
Careful induction keeps trees alive and productive.”