Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus

Longitudinal growth strain (LGS), which is an intrinsic property of wood, can explain the considerable internal effort - generally known as "growth stresses" - sustained by wood of standing trees. These stresses are released during processing operations (from felling to log conversion) and can damage the wood by causing end splits, warping and broken boards. The effect of early girdling, done months before felling to dry the tree on the stump, was tested by some researchers and many end-users in order to reduce the adverse effects of growth stresses. For example killing the tree on the stump months before felling seems to have been a traditional activity in Northern part of Spain where this technique was applied on previously chosen trees of Eucalyptus globulus species destined for construction wood. In this study two species of Eucalyptus from Morocco were tested: Eucalyptus grandis and Eucalyptus gomphocephala. Three trees per species were girdled for each of the four periods between girdling and felling tested (4, 6, 12 months). Three control trees were selected per species. LGS was measured on each tree initially and just before felling. Samples for physical and mechanical trials were collected on butt log. The latter was sawn and the deformation of the sawings were measured. The results obtained show important decreases in the initial values of the growth stresses. The differences between controls and girdled trees on physical and mechanical properties are discussed. The stability of the lumbers were improved. The major problem of the method is the insect attack. It could be overcome by specific solutions. (Texte intégral)

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Main Authors: Famiri, Abderrahim, Baillères, Henri
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: IUFRO
Subjects:K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/538445/
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5384452015-09-09T17:19:00Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/538445/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/538445/ Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus. Famiri Abderrahim, Baillères Henri. 2003. In : IUFRO all Division 5 Conference, 11-15 March 2003, Rotorua, New Zealand. s.l. : IUFRO, 217. IUFRO All Division 5 (Forest products) Conference, Rotorua, Nouvelle-Zélande, 11 Mars 2003/15 Mars 2003. Researchers Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus Famiri, Abderrahim Baillères, Henri eng 2003 IUFRO IUFRO all Division 5 Conference, 11-15 March 2003, Rotorua, New Zealand K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers Longitudinal growth strain (LGS), which is an intrinsic property of wood, can explain the considerable internal effort - generally known as "growth stresses" - sustained by wood of standing trees. These stresses are released during processing operations (from felling to log conversion) and can damage the wood by causing end splits, warping and broken boards. The effect of early girdling, done months before felling to dry the tree on the stump, was tested by some researchers and many end-users in order to reduce the adverse effects of growth stresses. For example killing the tree on the stump months before felling seems to have been a traditional activity in Northern part of Spain where this technique was applied on previously chosen trees of Eucalyptus globulus species destined for construction wood. In this study two species of Eucalyptus from Morocco were tested: Eucalyptus grandis and Eucalyptus gomphocephala. Three trees per species were girdled for each of the four periods between girdling and felling tested (4, 6, 12 months). Three control trees were selected per species. LGS was measured on each tree initially and just before felling. Samples for physical and mechanical trials were collected on butt log. The latter was sawn and the deformation of the sawings were measured. The results obtained show important decreases in the initial values of the growth stresses. The differences between controls and girdled trees on physical and mechanical properties are discussed. The stability of the lumbers were improved. The major problem of the method is the insect attack. It could be overcome by specific solutions. (Texte intégral) conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers
K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers
spellingShingle K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers
K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers
Famiri, Abderrahim
Baillères, Henri
Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
description Longitudinal growth strain (LGS), which is an intrinsic property of wood, can explain the considerable internal effort - generally known as "growth stresses" - sustained by wood of standing trees. These stresses are released during processing operations (from felling to log conversion) and can damage the wood by causing end splits, warping and broken boards. The effect of early girdling, done months before felling to dry the tree on the stump, was tested by some researchers and many end-users in order to reduce the adverse effects of growth stresses. For example killing the tree on the stump months before felling seems to have been a traditional activity in Northern part of Spain where this technique was applied on previously chosen trees of Eucalyptus globulus species destined for construction wood. In this study two species of Eucalyptus from Morocco were tested: Eucalyptus grandis and Eucalyptus gomphocephala. Three trees per species were girdled for each of the four periods between girdling and felling tested (4, 6, 12 months). Three control trees were selected per species. LGS was measured on each tree initially and just before felling. Samples for physical and mechanical trials were collected on butt log. The latter was sawn and the deformation of the sawings were measured. The results obtained show important decreases in the initial values of the growth stresses. The differences between controls and girdled trees on physical and mechanical properties are discussed. The stability of the lumbers were improved. The major problem of the method is the insect attack. It could be overcome by specific solutions. (Texte intégral)
format conference_item
topic_facet K50 - Technologie des produits forestiers
author Famiri, Abderrahim
Baillères, Henri
author_facet Famiri, Abderrahim
Baillères, Henri
author_sort Famiri, Abderrahim
title Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
title_short Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
title_full Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
title_fullStr Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
title_full_unstemmed Effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of Eucalyptus
title_sort effect of early girdling on standing trees on growth stresses and sawing deformations of two species of eucalyptus
publisher IUFRO
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/538445/
work_keys_str_mv AT famiriabderrahim effectofearlygirdlingonstandingtreesongrowthstressesandsawingdeformationsoftwospeciesofeucalyptus
AT baillereshenri effectofearlygirdlingonstandingtreesongrowthstressesandsawingdeformationsoftwospeciesofeucalyptus
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