Assessing wood grain and twist in a 2-year-old Eucalyptus bosistoana breeding population
Date
Authors
Sharma, Monika
Dijkstra, Stephanie M.
Garrill, Ashley
Collings, David A.
Altaner, Clemens M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Statement
Abstract
Key message: Radial grain patterns in young E. bosistoana trees are not random but are under genetic control and are correlated to other properties. Detailed high-resolution grain assessments match results from economical larger resolution techniques. Abstract: Interlocked grain affects stem properties and timber value. Eucalyptus bosistoana is an emerging plantation species that is supported by a breeding programme, and which shows prominent interlocked grain. Grain assessments are difficult, either restricted in their spatial resolution or resource demanding. Comparative analysis of flexible and high-resolution X-ray microtomography grain measurements were shown to match the economical splitting test. Splitting demonstrated that, on average, grain in the 2-year-old E. bosistoana trees was straight close to the pith becoming slightly left-handed over the first 4 mm, but then developing a strong right-handed twist reaching an average of almost 5° by 12 mm. There was, however, a large degree of variability. Further, grain measures obtained from splitting tests correlated to the observed twisting of the stems. Lastly, twisting of timber was under genetic control. The combination of a heritability (h2) value of 0.34 and a coefficient of genetic variation value (rg) of 44% means that our assessment techniques for young trees could be incorporated into a breeding programme.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Trees - Structure and Function
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication