Aquilaria malaccensis produces one of the world’s rarest and most valuable aromatic materials known as agarwood—also called oud, gaharu, aloeswood, or eaglewood.
Agarwood is a dark, fragrant resin-infused wood formed inside certain trees of the Aquilaria genus when the tree becomes wounded or infected by microorganisms such as fungi.
Normally, the wood is pale and relatively odorless.
But when the tree experiences stress or infection, it produces a protective resin. Over time, this resin saturates the wood, transforming it into:
- Darker
- Heavier
- Intensely aromatic
This resinous wood is what we call agarwood.
How Agarwood Forms
Healthy Tree
- Light-colored wood
- Minimal scent
Infection / Wounding
The tree responds to:
- Natural wounds
- Insect attacks
- Fungal inoculation
- Environmental stress
Resin Production
The tree produces defensive resin:
- Rich in aromatic compounds
- Slowly accumulates over years
Mature Agarwood
The infected area becomes:
- Dense
- Dark
- Fragrant
What Does Agarwood Smell Like?
Agarwood has one of the most complex aromas in perfumery.
Common scent facets:
- Smoky
- Woody
- Sweet
- Resinous
- Balsamic
- Leather-like
- Spicy
- Animalic
- Earthy
High-quality oud evolves over time on skin or when heated.
Why Is Agarwood So Valuable?
Because:
- It is rare
- Resin formation takes years
- Not all trees produce high-grade resin
- The aroma is extremely complex
- It is highly prized in luxury perfumery
Some top-grade oud oils can become more expensive than gold by weight.
Uses of Agarwood
Perfumery
Used in:
- Luxury perfumes
- Extraits
- Attars
Incense
Burned in:
- Middle Eastern traditions
- Japanese kōdō ceremonies
- Religious rituals
Aromatic Extracts
Produced as:
- Essential oil
- CO₂ extracts
- FullSpectrum™ extracts like RESINA NOIRE™
Major Agarwood Species
Important species include:
- Aquilaria malaccensis
- Aquilaria filaria
- Aquilaria cumingiana
Conservation & Sustainability
Wild agarwood became heavily overharvested because of high demand.
As a result:
- Many species are protected under Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
- Sustainable plantation cultivation is now essential
Modern agroforestry systems and controlled inoculation methods help produce agarwood responsibly.
Modern Agarwood Innovation
Traditional oud was mainly:
- Wild harvested
- Steam distilled
Modern systems now use:
- Controlled cultivation
- Biological inoculation
- Supercritical CO₂ extraction
- Full-spectrum aromatic preservation
This is the foundation behind premium materials such as:
RESINA NOIRE™ FullSpectrum™ Agarwood Extracts
Simple Definition
Agarwood is a rare aromatic resinous wood formed when Aquilaria trees defend themselves against stress or infection, producing one of the world’s most prized natural fragrance materials.