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词条 Civet (perfumery)
释义

  1. Production

  2. Composition

  3. Uses

  4. Safety

  5. Name

  6. History

  7. References

{{About|the perfume component|the animal|Civet| the music band|Civet (band)|the economic term|CIVETS}}{{other uses|Civet (disambiguation)}}

Civet (Zibeth; Zibet; Zibetum), also known as civet musk, is the glandular secretion produced by both sexes of Viverridae species.

Production

A number of viverrid species secrete civet oil in their perineal glands, including the African civet (Civettictis civetta), large Indian civet (Viverra zibetha) and small Indian civet (Viverricula indica). Most civet is produced in African farms, where African civets are kept in cages for this purpose.[1][2] African civets typically produce three to four grams of civet per week. In 2000, civet sold for about five hundred dollars per kilogram.[3]

Civet is a soft, almost liquid material. It is pale yellow when fresh, darkening in the light and becoming salve-like in consistency. Its odor is strong, even putrid as a pure substance, but once diluted it is pleasantly and sweetly aromatic. It is prepared for use in perfumery by solvent extraction to yield either a tincture (10 or 20 percent), an absolute, or a resinoid.[1][2]

Composition

The chemical in civet oil that gives it most of its distinctive odor is civetone, at a concentration of between 2.5 and 3.4 percent. The oil also includes various other ketones such as cyclopentadecanone, cyclohexadecanone, cycloheptadecanone, and 6-cis-cycloheptadecenone. The animal scent is reinforced by the presence of smaller amounts of indole and skatole, which in African civet are present at a concentration of about 1 percent.[1][2]

Uses

Civet has a distinctly different odor from musk and was formerly a versatile ingredient of fine fragrances. It is being displaced by 5-cyclohexadecen-1-one (Ambretone) which is more easily synthesized.[1]

Civet absolute [68916-26-7] is used as a flavor and in perfumery.[4][5]

Safety

The USA does not allow civets to be imported, as the species can transmit the SARS virus.[6] The USA does however permit the importation of civet oil, as long as it has been treated to ensure it is noninfectious.[7]

Name

The name derives from the Arabic zabād or sinnawr al-zabād, civet cat (Viverra civetta), by way of Old Italian zibetto and Middle French civette.[8]

[9]

History

The 10th century Arab historian al-Masudi mentioned civet (zabāda) as a spice in his book Murūdj al-dhahab (Meadows of Gold).[10]

Civet was among the many trade items that caravans, controlled by the Ghana empires, carried from the Niger valley to North Africa.[11]

References

1. ^{{cite book |author=Fahlbusch, Karl-Georg |chapter=Flavors and Fragrances | title=Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry | edition=7th | publisher=Wiley | year=2007 | page=86 |display-authors=etal}}
2. ^{{citation | entry=CIVET | author=George A. Burdock | title=Fenaroli's Handbook of Flavor Ingredients | edition=6th | publisher=Taylor & Francis | year=2010 | page=326}}
3. ^{{citation | author=Shalu, Tuteja | title=Civettictis Civetta African Civet | publisher=Animal Diversity Web | year=2000 | url=http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Civettictis_civetta.html}}
4. ^{{citation | entry=CIVET ABSOLUTE | author=George A. Burdock | title=Fenaroli's Handbook of Flavor Ingredients | edition=6th | publisher=Taylor & Francis | year=2010 | page=326‒327}}
5. ^{{ citation | title=Transparency List | year=2011 | publisher=International Fragrance Association | url=http://www.ifraorg.org/en/ingredients | accessdate=2014-09-12}}
6. ^{{citation | title=Bringing a Civet into the United States | publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | url=https://www.cdc.gov/animalimportation/civets.html | accessdate=2014-09-12}}
7. ^{{citation | title=Bringing Animal Products into the United States | publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | url=https://www.cdc.gov/animalimportation/animalproducts.html | accessdate=2014-09-12}}
8. ^{{citation | title=Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary | contribution=civet | contribution-url=http://cheetah.eb.com/dictionary/civet}}
9. ^{{citation | author=F. Viré | contribution=SINNAWR | title=The Encyclopaedia of Islam | edition=2nd | volume=9 | publisher=Brill | year=1997 | page=653b}}
10. ^{{citation | author=A. Dietrich | contribution=AFĀWĪH | title=The Encyclopaedia of Islam | edition=2nd | volume=12 (supplement) | publisher=Brill | year=2004 | page=42b}}
11. ^{{citation | editor=Willie F. Page | editor2=R. Hunt Davis, Jr. | entry=civets | title=Encyclopedia of African history and culture | volume=1 | edition=revised | publisher=Facts on File | year=2005 | page=58}}

3 : Animal glandular products|Flavors|Perfume ingredients

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