Ciência Florestal (Jan 2016)

EFEITO DO TEOR DE EXTRATIVOS NA RESISTÊNCIA NATURAL DE CINCO MADEIRAS AO ATAQUE DE CUPINS XILÓFAGOS

  • Juarez Benigno Paes,
  • Sara Carolina Soares Guerra,
  • Luciana Ferreira da Silva,
  • José Geraldo Lima de Oliveira,
  • Gilson Barbosa São Teago

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 4
pp. 1259 – 1269

Abstract

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When man stopped being nomadic, he had to adapt to new conditions, and started employing wood for energy, hunting and defense instruments and miscellaneous constructive elements. Since then, in the light of usages and rapid growth, the importance of wood has been increasing, primarily by their exploitation assaults less the environment when compared to other non-renewable materials. Although there are several researches about Eucalyptus and Pinus, but studies with other species are incipient mainly about the extractive effects on the wood natural resistance. Thus, this research aimed to assess the influence of extractive contents with the natural resistance of Acacia mangium, Casuarina sp. Eucalyptus cloeziana, Corymbia torelliana and Tectona grandis woods to Nasutitermes corniger xylophagous termite, species of frequent occurrence in several regions in Brazil. From each species, test samples were taken, with dimensions of 2.00 x 10.16 x 0.64 (radial x longitudinal x tangential) in four positions in the medulla-sapwood direction (internal core, intermediate core, outer core and sapwood). The woods were exposed to the action of termites for 45 days in a food preference assay. The samples not selected for the test with termites were turned into sawdust and the extractive contents were obtained by using the fraction which passed through the sieve 40 and was retained in 60 mesh. The natural resistance has not been linked to extractive levels present in the wood. The resistance of wood varied in medulla-sapwood direction, with default variable for each species. The more resistant timbers were Tectona grandis and Corymbia torelliana and the most deteriorated was Acacia mangium.