Wood durability in terrestrial and aquatic environments – A review of biotic and abiotic influence factors. Marais, B. N., Brischke, C., & Militz, H. Wood Material Science & Engineering, 17(2):82–105, 2022. Publisher: Taylor & Francis _eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/17480272.2020.1779810
Wood durability in terrestrial and aquatic environments – A review of biotic and abiotic influence factors [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Factors relevant to degradation are important in every wood application. For wood used in ground and water contact; well documented abiotic factors (or agents) include exposure to temperature and moisture linked to the physiological requirements of biotic degradation agents such as wood-decaying fungi and bacteria. Other biotic degradation agents such as subterranean insects and marine borers occur overshadowing the effect of fungal and bacterial decay, but are restricted in geographical distribution and to aquatic applications, respectively. This review focusses on decay specific to soil exposure. The inherent material characteristics are important to durability in that heartwood and sapwood show differences in resistance to degradation between species, provenance, and individual trees. Wood durability testing methods and classification, as well as a summary of prominent models and variables suitable for regional-level modelling of in-ground wood durability are presented.
@article{marais_wood_2022,
	title = {Wood durability in terrestrial and aquatic environments – {A} review of biotic and abiotic influence factors},
	volume = {17},
	issn = {1748-0272},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/17480272.2020.1779810},
	doi = {10.1080/17480272.2020.1779810},
	abstract = {Factors relevant to degradation are important in every wood application. For wood used in ground and water contact; well documented abiotic factors (or agents) include exposure to temperature and moisture linked to the physiological requirements of biotic degradation agents such as wood-decaying fungi and bacteria. Other biotic degradation agents such as subterranean insects and marine borers occur overshadowing the effect of fungal and bacterial decay, but are restricted in geographical distribution and to aquatic applications, respectively. This review focusses on decay specific to soil exposure. The inherent material characteristics are important to durability in that heartwood and sapwood show differences in resistance to degradation between species, provenance, and individual trees. Wood durability testing methods and classification, as well as a summary of prominent models and variables suitable for regional-level modelling of in-ground wood durability are presented.},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2022-03-17},
	journal = {Wood Material Science \& Engineering},
	author = {Marais, Brendan Nicholas and Brischke, Christian and Militz, Holger},
	year = {2022},
	note = {Publisher: Taylor \& Francis
\_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/17480272.2020.1779810},
	keywords = {fungi, bacteria, marine environment, soil contact, Decay, freshwater contact},
	pages = {82--105},
	file = {Full Text PDF:C\:\\Users\\Eva\\Zotero\\storage\\IL39GT2D\\Marais et al. - 2022 - Wood durability in terrestrial and aquatic environ.pdf:application/pdf},
}

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