FURTHER INVESTIGATION OF THE PENETRATION OF LIQUIDS INTO WOOD

1934 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Sutherland ◽  
H. Wyatt Johnston ◽  
O. Maass

The rate of penetration of water through heartwood, pressure and temperature remaining constant, shows an initial fairly rapid decrease followed by a gradual decrease to a constant rate. With unseasoned sapwood, the rate of penetration increases to a maximum, after which it slowly decreases. With seasoned sapwood the rate decreases with elapsed time. Pre-soaking for periods up to seven days does not affect the equilibrium rate of penetration. The initial rate is lower with pre-soaked than with air-dry wood. Pre-soaking does not hasten the attainment of an equilibrium rate. Rate of penetration is fairly constant for heartwood specimens of the same kind taken from the same transverse section of a tree. Unseasoned sapwood is more than 200 times as permeable as heartwood from the same tree. White spruce, black spruce and red pine heartwoods show about the same penetrability at low pressures. At higher pressures red pine becomes much more permeable than white spruce at the same pressure. The same is true of cedar, tamarack and balsam. Unseasoned sapwoods show increasing penetrability in the order hemlock, balsam, red pine, white spruce. Observed apparent penetration radially and tangentially through heartwood is less than 9% of that in the longitudinal direction. (Water actually penetrating was in no case greater than 1% of that penetrating longitudinally in the same time through a specimen of the same thickness.) In sap-wood the rate of radial and tangential penetration is less than 2% of that in the longitudinal direction. Tangential penetration of white spruce sapwood is probably greater than radial penetration. Rate of longitudinal penetration increases with decrease in thickness of specimen. A very great increase in rate is noted after the thickness becomes less than one fibre length. This is suggested as a method of obtaining an approximation to the average fibre length. Rate is not inversely proportional to thickness, but decreases more rapidly with increasing thickness owing to loss of pressure head in passing pit membranes. Rate of penetration increases with increase in pressure differential. The rate is proportional to pressure (or slightly greater) in white spruce. The rate increases much more rapidly than proportionately with balsam, tamarack, cedar and red pine. This is due to bulging of thin pit membranes and consequent enlargement of perforations. Magnitudes of pressure and back pressure have no effect on rate of penetration, or time to reach an equilibrium rate, if pressure differential remains constant. Penetrability is not altered permanently by the application of pressure. Rate of penetration increases with temperature. Temperatures above 70 °C. have a permanent effect on the penetrability. Intensive drying of wood increases its penetrability.Sucrose solutions cause a decrease in rate of penetration greater than that expected from viscosity considerations. Molar sodium hydroxide increases the permeability of heartwood specimens of greater than one fibre length, and decreases that of sapwood and very thin sections of heartwood. Molar hydrochloric acid decreases the rate of penetration through heartwood, but has little effect on that through sapwood. Gases penetrate seasoned heartwood and sapwood easily. Pre-soaked heartwood strongly resists penetration by gases. Short lengths of unseasoned or pre-soaked sapwood are fairly easily penetrated by gases. All the evidence points to the absence of any valve action on the part of pit membrane tori.A new theory has been advanced to account for the phenomena ordinarily ascribed to valve action, and also to explain those observations which could not be explained satisfactorily as due to torus valves.

1989 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 183-185
Author(s):  
David I. Maass ◽  
Andrea N. Colgan ◽  
N. Lynn Cochran ◽  
Carl L. Haag ◽  
James A. Hatch

Abstract Long-term performance of container-grown seedlings in Maine was unknown in the late 1970s. A study was established to test the performance of five conifer species: Norway, white and black spruce, and red and jack pine, grown in four containers of similar volume: Can-Am Multipot #1, Multipot #2, Japanese Paperpot FH408, and Styroblock 4. Seven years after outplanting, stem heights of jack pine and red pine were significantly greater for trees started in Multipot #2 containers. Three spruce species with the greatest growth were started in Multipot #1 containers. Paperpot seedlings ranked second in height for pines, Norway spruce, and white spruce; Styroblock 4's ranked last for all species. North. J. Appl. For. 6:183-185, December 1989.


2011 ◽  
Vol 87 (04) ◽  
pp. 494-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krish Homagain ◽  
Chander Shahi ◽  
Willard Carmean ◽  
Mathew Leitch ◽  
Colin Bowling

Intensive forest management for wood production requires that we identify our most productive forest lands as well as the most productive and most commercially valuable tree species that should be managed on these lands. The Thunder Bay Spacing Trial established in 1950 provides growth and yield comparisons on a productive site for red pine, white spruce, and black spruce. Our analysis based on six remeasurements from 1983 to 2007 show that red pine has produced more than twice the volume of white spruce and about three times the volume of black spruce. The greater volume for red pine in comparison to the spruces is attributed to taller trees, larger average diameters and more basal area.


1988 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 345-351 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Whitney

Armillaria root rot. caused most likely by Armillaria obscura (Pers) Herink, killed 6-to 21-year-old white spruce, black spruce, jack pine and red pine saplings in each of 49 plantations examined in northern Ontario. Annual mortality in the four species over the last 2 to 6 years averaged 1.4%, 1.5%, 0.5% and 0.2%, respectively. In all but one of 25 white spruce and red pine plantations (43 to 58 years old) in eastern and southern Ontario. Armillaria root rot was associated with mortality. Accumulated mortality in white spruce and red pine (initially recorded in 1978) averaged 7.6% and 11.7%, respectively, as of 1986. Current annual mortality for all plantations ranged from 0% to 16%. Key words: root rot. Armillaria obscura, white spruce, black spruce, jack pine, red pine.


1975 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bryce E. Schlaegel

Volume and dry-weight yield comparisons of 40-year-old planted red pine (Pinusresinosa Ait.), jack pine (Pinusbanksiana Lamb.), white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench.) Voss), black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) BSP), and a naturally regenerated aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.) sucker stand show that red pine has the highest yields and black spruce the lowest. Volume yields of aspen, jack pine, and white spruce are similar, but weight yields of white spruce are much less than weight yields of either aspen or jack pine. It is recommended that yield comparisons within and between species should be done on a weight as well as a volume basis because large differences in densities can occur.


1994 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. McClain ◽  
D. M. Morris ◽  
S. C. Hills ◽  
L. J. Buse

A spacing trial was established near Thunder Bay, Ontario in 1950. This trial consisted of black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.), white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss.), and red pine (Pinus resinosa Ait.) each established at three different spacings: 1.8 m, 2.7 m, and 3.6 m. This study examines the differences in growth and crown development as attributed to initial spacing, after 37 years. In addition, a benefit/cost analysis was performed to evaluate the economic efficiency of the various species/spacing combinations. Diameter at breast height, live crown length, and crown width, all exhibited significant (P < 0.001) increases as initial spacing increased, irrespective of species, but, height demonstrated a decreasing trend (P < 0.020). Gross total and merchantable stem volume per tree increased for all species as initial spacing increased; however, volume production per unit area decreased significantly for all species as spacing increased. The shift to higher-valued products from the wider-spaced plantations appeared to provide the best economic return. As a result of both greater merchantable volumes and greater percentages of these volumes available as a higher-valued product, benefit/cost ratios for red pine (0.995 to 1.337) were greater than those for the spruces (0.595 to 0.866). Although red pine currently represents less than 4% of Ontario's total regeneration effort, the results from this study suggest it deserves further consideration on some boreal sites. Key words: spacing trial, plantation growth, crown development, black spruce, white spruce, red pine, benefit/cost ratio


2020 ◽  
Vol 472 ◽  
pp. 118271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing-Lai Dang ◽  
Jacob Marfo ◽  
Fengguo Du ◽  
Md. Shah Newaz

Trees ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 633-641 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Colombo ◽  
Colin W. G. Templeton

1989 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 295-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Whitney

In an 11-year study in northern Ontario, root rot damage was heaviest in balsam fir, intermediate in black spruce, and least in white spruce. As a result of root rot, 16, 11, and 6%, respectively, of dominant or codominant trees of the three species were killed or experienced premature windfall. Butt rot, which resulted from the upward extension of root rot into the boles of living trees, led to a scaled cull of 17, 12, and 10%, respectively, of gross merchantable volume of the remaining living trees in the three species. The total volume of wood lost to rot was, therefore, 33, 23, and 16%, respectively. Of 1108 living dominant and codominant balsam fir, 1243 black spruce, and 501 white spruce in 165 stands, 87, 68, and 63%, respectively, exhibited some degree of advanced root decay. Losses resulting from root rot increased with tree age. Significant amounts of root decay and stain (>30% of root volume) first occurred at 60 years of age in balsam fir and 80 years in black spruce and white spruce. For the three species together, the proportion of trees that were dead and windfallen as a result of root rot increased from an average of 3% at 41–50 years to 13% at 71–80 years and 26% at 101–110 years. The root rot index, based on the number of dead and windfallen trees and estimated loss of merchantable volume, also increased, from an average of 17 at 41–50 years to 40 at 71–80 years and 53 at 101–110 years. Death and windfall of balsam fir and black spruce were more common in northwestern Ontario than in northeastern Ontario. Damage to balsam fir was greater in the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence Forest region than in the Boreal Forest region. In all three tree species, the degree of root rot (decay and stain) was highly correlated with the number of dead and windfallen trees, stand age, and root decay at ground level (as a percentage of basal area) for a 10-tree sample.


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