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bulnesia_sarmientoi_lorentz_ex_griseb

Bulnesia sarmientoi Lorentz ex Griseb. - Zygophyllaceae
Paraguay lignum vitae, (Paragay) guaiacwood, verawood, palo santo (span.), Paraguay Guajakholz, Paraguay Pockholz

Large tree, endemic to the Gran Chaco region of central South America (Paraguy to Bolivia).

Another tree of Central and northern South America, Bursera graveloens, is also called palo santo.

Guaiac is also the name of the trees and the resins of Guaiacum officinale and Guaiacum sanctum, both named 'lignum vitae'.
Furthermore two other species are called lignum-vitae:
Premna lignum-vitae (Schauer) Pieper (Queensland lignum-vitae), NE Australia
Bulnesia arborea (Jacquin) Engler (verawood or Maracaibo lignum-vitae), Colombia and Venezuela

The volatile oil of B.sarmientoi (Guaiac wood oil or short Guaiac oil) is obtained by steam distillation of a mixture of wood and sawdust. The 'oil' (a yellow to greenish semi-solid substance that melts at ca. 40–50◦C) has a soft rose-like odour, and has thus been used as an adulterant for rose oil. Major components are guaiol (20%, sweet woody balsamic) and bulnesol (35%, dry balsamic woody); minor ones (−)-hanamyol (2.5%), α-eudesmol (3.6%), 7-epi-α-eudesmol (3.2%), γ-eudesmol (2.5%), α-bulnesene (1.1%), guaioxide (0.5%), elemol (0.5%), eudesm-5-en-11-ol (0.7%), β-guaiene (0.1%, sweet woody).
[Advances in the identification and agrochemical importance of sesquiterpenoids from Bulnesia sarmientoi essential oil., Rodilla, J.M., Silva, L.A., Martinez, N., Lorenzo, D., Davyt, D., Castillo, L., Dellacassa, E., Industrial Crops and Products, Vol.33(2), 2011, 497-503]

 guaiol
guaiol
 bulnesol
bulnesol

„The essential oil derived from B. sarmientoi wood was reported to be widely used in the perfume and cosmetics industry and in mosquito repellents (Giménez et al., 2007; Argentine Republic, 2010). Resin derived from the residue of the distillation process was also reported to be used to produce dark varnishes and paints (PFNM, 2003; in: Giménez et al., 2007). Harvest levels of the species were considered to be low up until 2002, when international demand reportedly increased, leading to industrial-scale exports from Argentina and Paraguay (Barros et al. 2010). Barros et al. (2010) considered the harvest levels of the species in 2010 to be unsustainable at the regional and local levels.“
[Review of Bulnesia sarmientoi from Paraguay, UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre, 2011] http://ec.europa.eu/environment/cites/pdf/reports/Bulnesia_sarmientoi.pdf

An olfactory investigation of guaiacwood oil led to identification of 13 odorant compounds. The main compound, bulnesol, „…was identified as possessing a delicate rosy note and was characterised by all panellists as providing the highest odour contribution (FD 2048). An intense fruity note was perceived at 21.5 min and was assigned to β-ionone [FD 256].“
Other typical notes identified were leather (guaiacol, FD 32 and 4-propylphenol, FD 8), clove (isoeugenol, FD 128 and eugenol, FD 64), and vanilla (vanillin, FD 16). Guaiol was perceived as 'rosy, powdery' (FD 8).
[Tissandié, L., Viciana, S., Brevard, H., Meierhenrich, U. J., & Filippi, J. J. (2018). Towards a complete characterisation of guaiacwood oil. Phytochemistry, 149, 64-81]


By acetylation and fractional rectification, a product called 'guiacwood acetate' or 'guaiyl acetate' is obtained. It owns a delicate woody, fatty, tea rose aroma, and consists mostly of bulnesyl acetate and guaiyl acetate. http://perfumersupplyhouse.com/product/guaiyl-acetate-guaiacwood-acetate-ventos-quality/

bulnesia_sarmientoi_lorentz_ex_griseb.txt · Zuletzt geändert: 2018/06/08 14:19 von andreas