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Items for "wood decay"

Analytical tools to predict changes in properties of oriented strandboard exposed to the fungus Postia placenta

Weight loss, specific gravity and strength are traditional measures of how wood changes after fungal exposure...

Keywords: brown rot, dowel-bearing strength, nails, near-infrared spectroscopy, NIR, oriented strand board, Postia placenta, wood decay, X-ray densitometry

05/2006 | Holzforschung, Walter de Gruyter
The effect of CaCl2 on growth rate, wood decay and oxalic acid accumulation in Serpula lacrymans and related brown-rot fungi

The dry rot fungus, Serpula lacrymans, is one of the most destructive copper-tolerant fungi causing timber decay in buildings in temperate regions...

Keywords: brown-rot fungi, calcium, CaCl2, copper citrate (CC), copper-based preservative, HPLC, oxalic acid, Serpula lacrymans, soil bottle test, wood decay

05/2006 | Holzforschung, Walter de Gruyter
Iron-reducing capacity of low-molecular-weight compounds produced in wood by fungi

Birch and pine wood specimens were colonized by individual isolates of 12 brown-rot, 26 white-rot, six soft-rot and four blue (sap)-stain fungi...

Keywords: biochelator, Biodegradation, brown rot, Iron reduction, white rot, wood decay

11/2006 | Holzforschung, Walter de Gruyter
Prediction of natural durability of commercial available European and Siberian larch by near-infrared spectroscopy

The natural durability of larch wood is described as being highly variable, ranging from non-durable to durable...

Keywords: Coniophora puteana, fibre-optic probe, Gloeophyllum trabeum, heartwood, Larix, near-infrared spectroscopy, natural durability, wood decay

11/2006 | Holzforschung, Walter de Gruyter
Iron and calcium translocation from pure gypsum and iron-amended gypsum by two brown rot fungi and a white rot fungus

Wood-degrading fungi commonly grow in contact with calcium (Ca)-containing building materials and may import Ca and iron (Fe) from soil into forest woody debris...

Keywords: dry rot, masonry, Oxalate, Serpula, wood decay

11/2008 | Holzforschung, Walter de Gruyter