4.6 Article

The role of extractives in naturally durable wood species

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Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ibiod.2013.03.007

Keywords

Natural durability; Wood extractives; Decay fungi; Brown-rot; White-rot; Termite

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There are numerous examples of wood species that naturally exhibit enhanced performance and longevity in outside exposure independent of preservative treatment. Wood extractives are largely considered to be the contributing factor when evaluating and predicting the performance of a naturally durable wood species. However, little test methodology exists that focuses on the extent of the role of extractives in wood durability. In this study, eight candidate naturally durable wood species plus a nondurable control were evaluated in laboratory soil block tests for resistance to termite attack and decay by three brown-rot and three white-rot decay fungi. Chemically extracted test blocks were compared to unextracted controls. Extracted durable species were also compared to non-durable controls. Results showed nearly all of the wood species exhibited higher weight loss due to termite or fungi when extractives were removed and extracted samples had weight losses that were comparable to the nondurable controls. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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