Q.34 Turpentine which is an oleo–resin is obtained from
Turpentine, an oleo-resin, is obtained from Pinus species. Pine trees (Pinaceae family), particularly Pinus palustris (longleaf pine) and Pinus pinaster (maritime pine), produce oleoresin tapped from trunk wounds, which is steam-distilled to yield gum turpentine (α/β-pinene rich) and rosin.
Option Analysis
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(1) Pinus: Correct—primary commercial source; oleoresin (gum/resin + turpentine oil) harvested via V-notches, yields 18-20% turpentine spirits.
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(2) Abies: True firs produce balsam (Abies balsamea Canada balsam), not turpentine; different terpene profile (β-phellandrene dominant).
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(3) Ginkgo: Ginkgo biloba yields foul-smelling seed coat oil (no resin); gymnosperm but no oleoresin tapping.
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(4) Cycas: Cycads exude gum from injuries (polysaccharide-based), not terpenoid turpentine oleoresin.
Answer: (1) Pinus.
Introduction to Turpentine Source
Turpentine which is an oleo-resin is obtained from Pinus species, tapped from living pines yielding crude gum (65% rosin, 18% turpentine). Steam distillation separates C10 monoterpenes (pinene 60-70%) used in solvents, paints, fragrances.
Pinus Oleoresin Production
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Tapping: V-shaped streaks channel resin flow
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Distillation: 150-170°C yields gum spirits (90% α/β-pinene)
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Byproduct: Rosin (abietic acid) for adhesives, soldering flux
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Yield: 30M gallons turpentine annually from southern pines
Why Other Genera Fail
| Genus | Product | Composition |
|---|---|---|
| Pinus | Turpentine | Pinene-rich |
| Abies | Balsam | Phellandrene |
| Ginkgo | Seed oil | Butyric acid |
| Cycas | Gum | Polysaccharides |
GATE Economic Botany Relevance
Tests plant product sources: Pinus=turpentine, Shorea=damar, Dipterocarpus=kauri. Essential for pharmacognosy, forestry, industrial botany questions.


