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Nectar

nectar
State
Liquid
Molar mass
21
Specific heat
4.1
Thermal conductivity
0.609

Overview

Nectar is a harvestable resource produced by a mature tree trunk. The tree does not begin generating Nectar immediately; it only starts producing once it has fully mature branches and is exposed to light. After that, harvesting the trunk yields 20 kg of Nectar per harvest.

Because production depends on both maturity and illumination, a tree that is still growing or left in the dark will not provide Nectar yet. In practice, this makes Nectar a managed crop resource rather than something collected passively: the plant has to be brought to full development first, and its growing conditions must continue to satisfy the light requirement before harvesting becomes possible.

  • Nectar can be obtained by harvesting the mature tree trunk itself.
  • A single harvest yields 20 kg.
  • The tree must have fully mature branches before it starts producing Nectar.
  • The tree must also be under light for Nectar production to begin.

This makes timing important. If the branches are not yet fully mature, the trunk remains unproductive. Once the growth condition is met, the trunk becomes a repeatable source of Nectar as long as the plant stays in the right environment.

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