Tea Production 1 4
Tea Production 1 4
INTRODUCTION
History,
Origin and Distribution
of TEA
Scientific name: Camellia
sinensis
Family: Theaceae
Common name: Tea, tea bush,
cha, chai
Origin: is an evergreen plant
Native to East, South and
Southeast Asia (china), but it
is today cultivated across the
world in tropical and
subtropical regions.
Tea (Camellia sinensis)
Plant Over-View
TEA (Camellia sinensis) is an evergreen plant that grows mainly in
tropical and subtropical climates
The Tea Plant- belongs to;
Family Theaceae
Genus Camellia
Species sinensis.
Plant Over-View
What is in tea?
The three primary components of brewed tea (also
called the "liquor") are:
1. Essential Oils - these provide tea's delicious
aromas and flavors.
2. Polyphenols - these provide the "briskness" or
astringency in the mouth and are the components
that also carry most of the health benefits of tea.
3. Caffeine - found naturally in coffee, chocolate, and
tea caffeine provides tea's natural energy boost.
INTRODUCTTION OF TEA…
Tea has long been promoted for having a variety of positive health
benefits
Tea drinking likely began during the Shang Dynasty in China, when it
was used for medicinal purposes.
In India it has been drunk for medicinal purposes for a long but
uncertain period,
but apart from the Himalayan region seems not to have been used
as a beverage until the British introduced Chinese tea there
INTRODUCTTION CONT…
As lubricant
Economic Benefits
At the household level,
Wedding Ceremony
TEA
Production and
Consumption
in the world
On the other hand, the world tea supply and demands
Production and consumption….
Figure 1. World production, export and import for
consumption of tea (from 1950s to 1990s)
3000
2500 World Production
Quantity (in M. Kgs)
One year later (in 1928) the 2nd production of tea was made
by British General
(NCRC, 1998)
2001 1490 1626 3117
The production, however,
2002 1596 2309 3906
increased steadily (Since 1989
E.C)
2003 1907 2535 4441
The country has come to
supply tea for export market 2004 1990 2893 4883
The genus Camellia consists of 325 species of which sinensis is the most
important one
In 1712, Kaempfer was the first western botanist to recognize tea, naming it
Thea japonense.
50 years later Carl von Linne of Sweden-better known as Linnaeus
developed two accepted genera-Thea and Camellia.
Thea sinensis referred to the Chinese plant while Camellia japonica (assam
type)
Botany of tea cont…
In 1959 after several centuries of botanical debate, a
decision was made under the International Code of
Nomenclature.
The current and correct name for the tea plant is
therefore, Camellia sinensis (L.) O.Kuntze.
"Camellia"
comes from a Moravian Jesuit named Kamel (1661-
1706) who studied the plants of Asia
The name sinensis means Chinese in Latin
is from Linneaus and the (L.) refers to him
O. Kuntze
Botany cont…
The Tea Plant - belongs to the
Family: - Theaceae
Genus: - Camellia
Species: - Sinensis
obtain and
Cambodia types
classification cont…
Two principal varieties are used:
Camellia sinensis var. sinensis, which is used for
most Chinese and Japanese teas, and
Camellia sinensis var. assamica, used in most Indian
teas
Leaf size is the chief criterion for the classification of
tea plants, with three primary classifications being,
Root
Tea produces several deep roots, some of which
have been traced as deep as 6m below the soil
surface most of which however, are found in the
upper 90cm of the soil
Development
of
the Tea Plant
Growth Periods
The buds grow new tissue to make new leaves
and shoots
The shoot grows taller, with the bud and its dividing
zone always on top
"Fish leaf"
"Janam"
The dormant growth stage
Shoots are usually plucked at the 2 - 3 leaves
stage,
Tea yield and quality is best when the tea bushes are broad
and have many strong, healthy branches
Among the tropical crops there are none which demand such precise
requirements as tea does
The plant thrives best under high and evenly distributed rainfall throughout the
growing season
the distribution should be optimum (with the tropics the dry season not
more than three month)
Irrigation is used when the rain fall is erratic or less than 1200mm
and /or if the distribution is not even
Tea likes any other plants does not grow when the
temperatures are either too low or too high
substances increase.
yield drops, as it does when the weather is hot, dry and sunny.
Altitude
range
From lowlands to
m.a.s.l.
At higher elevations, where A tea plantation in the Cameron
Highlands in Malaysia
rainfall <2000 mm.
The plants grow more slowly
indicator plants,
different physical characteristics of the soil and
chemical characteristics of the soil
Soil requirement…
1. Indicator plants
Indicator plants could be used to evaluate soil for tea
cultivation.
– By considering the natural species that have similar
characteristics with the tea plants. E.g. -
- Albizia spp.,
- vernonia spp., and ferns
Soil depth
But, soil for tea should be at least 60cm deep with subsoil at least
1m deep.
Tea soil should have sufficient nutrients that support proper growth
of the plant.
300
– Wush-Wush = 1800 250
Rainfall (mm)
– Gummero = 1600 200
150
– Chewaka = 1830 100
50
0
• Rain fall - Annual average
July
Nov.
Jan.
June
May
Aug.
Oct.
April
Feb.
Dec.
Sept.
March
– Wush-Wush = 1516mm Month