Tea Oil Camellia Plantation, an Enormous Potentiality for Poverty Reduction
Hoang Van Thang *
Silviculture Research Institute, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Tran Van Do
Silviculture Research Institute, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Hanoi, Vietnam and Department of Forest Vegetation, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan.
Tamotsu Sato
Department of Forest Vegetation, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan.
Nguyen Quang Khai
Silviculture Research Institute, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Hanoi, Vietnam.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Aims: Apply different silvicultural approaches to improve oil productivity and quality from abandoned stands and analyze cost-benefit of developing tea oil camellias.
Study Design: Three experiments were conducted as (1) Changing canopy of 36-year-old plantation by grafting, (2) Using Bortrac fertilizer for promoting fruiting by spraying to canopy, and (3) Stem/branch thinning and fertilizing.
Place: North Central, Vietnam at 19º16’N and 105º23’E.
Methodology: Shoots of 4 – 6 mm in diameter and 3 -5 cm long from improved cultivar were used to graft to 36-year-old trees. Bortrac fertilizer was used to spray to canopy of 15-year-old plantation when trees bloomed. While three treatments of stem/branch thinning and fertilizing at different intensities was applied to 29-year-old plantation of 830 trees ha-1.
Results: The results showed that old stand, which has low seed productivity, could be replaced by a new canopy through grafting with improved cultivars. Meanwhile, fertilizing through spraying on canopy at early blooming peak with Bortrac fertilizer increased seed productivity by 28%. In addition, applying 0.5 kg inorganic fertilizer (NPK) and 5 kg organic manure per tree coupled with thinning under crown-old branches and diseased branches increased up to 60% seed productivity and improved oil ratio and quality. Cost-benefit analysis indicated that by applying different intensities of stem/branch thinning and fertilizing to 29-year-old plantation, profit margin increased from US$ 502 to as much as US$ 549 ha-1 year-1 for growers selling dry seeds as final product. Meanwhile, it increased from US$ 1,791 to US$ 2,426 ha-1 year-1 by extracting oil for final product.
Conclusion: There is a potentiality of growing tea oil camellia with the increased profit of as much as US$ 2,426 ha-1 year-1 for 29-year-old plantation by applying intensive silvicultural approach.
Keywords: Cost-benefit analysis, market instability, productivity, silvicultural approach, tea oil camellia