The Amazonian tree Aniba rosaeodora Ducke, whose wood provides commercial essential oil for perfumery houses, is at risk of extinction and listed by CITES. An alternative source of this oil would be to trim leaves of young plants and steam distill them to obtain the essential oil. Four-year-old plant material could provide an oil that can both be an economical source and eventually a replacement for wood oil in perfumery. A characterization of the essential oil from these leaves has been obtained by comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography. The two-dimensional analytical technique was able to separate and identify about three times more compounds than is the case with conventional gas chromatography, leading to a more complete essential oil chemical characterization.
Leaves from the morphologically similar Aniba rosaeodora and Aniba parviflora were used to obtain ESI and VL-EASI-MS fingerprinting spectra. The method differentiated rapidly and unequivocally the two species.
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