Search results for "SPRUCE"

showing 10 items of 27 documents

Phenolic Compounds as a Tool of Bioindication for Novel Forest Decline at Numerous Spruce Tree Sites in Germany

1996

Abstract Within a project that applied biochemical criteria to the diagnosis of damage to Norway spruce, 43 sites in western and eastern Germany showing only moderate tree damage were screened for the amounts of methanol soluble phenolic compounds in spruce needles. The concentrations of most of the main compounds-especially catechin-positively correlated with needle loss and the altitude of the site. It was also found that it is necessary to differenti­ate between trees younger and older than 60 years of age. The correlations between the increase of the phenolic compounds studied and the needle loss or the damage class are stronger in the younger trees, possibly implicating differences in …

EcologyBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySpruce TreeZeitschrift für Naturforschung C
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Organic material dissolved during oxygen-alkali pulping of hot-water-extracted spruce sawdust

2016

Untreated and hot-water-extracted (HWE) Norway spruce (Picea abies) sawdust was cooked using the sulfur-free oxygen-alkali (OA) method under the following conditions: temperature, 170 °C; liquor-to-wood ratio, 5:1 L/kg; and NaOH charge, 19% on the oven-dry sawdust. In comparison with earlier studies conducted with birch sawdust, the spruce cooking yield data, together with the amount of the pulp rejects (78% to 86% for reference pulps from the initial feedstock and 73% to 83% for pulps from the HWE feedstock), revealed that the pretreatment stage prior to spruce OA pulping caused different effects on pulping performance. The analyses of the three main compound groups (i.e., lignin, volatile…

Environmental Engineeringlcsh:BiotechnologyBioengineeringengineering.materialRaw materialhot-water extractionLigninchemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:TP248.13-248.65Ligninhydroxy acidsvolatile acidsBiorefiningHydroxy acidsautohydrolysisWaste Management and DisposalbiologyChemistryPulp (paper)fungifood and beveragesligniiniPicea abiesmustalipeäbiology.organism_classificationPulp and paper industryHot-water extractionHot water extractionVolatile acidsAutohydrolysisvisual_artBiorefiningNorway spruceengineeringvisual_art.visual_art_mediumSawdustbiorefiningBlack liquormetsäkuusiOxygen-alkali pulpingBlack liquoroxygen-alkali pulping
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Sulfur-free pulping of hot-water-extracted spruce sawdust

2016

Softwood (Picea abies) sawdust was hot-water-extracted with two multi-phase processes (160-180°C, 100-280 min, and liquor-to-wood ratio 5 l/kg) corresponding to P-factors of ~780 (yield 80.0%) and ~4580 (yield 72.4%). The pre-treated materials were then pulped with the soda-AQ cooking (170°C, NaOH charge 20%, AQ charge 0.1%, 30-150 min, and liquor-to-wood ratio 5 l/kg), resulting in a yield range of 36.1-61.4% (for reference cooks without pre-extraction 47.9-60.0%). It was observed that the pre-extraction under moderate conditions enhanced the dissolution especially of large-molar-mass lignin during cooking, and the total amount of the dissolved lignin was also higher than that removed from…

ExtractivesCarbohydrateschemistry.chemical_element02 engineering and technologyMolar-mass distributionLigninGeneral Materials Science040101 forestryAliphatic acidsHemicellulosestechnology industry and agricultureligniinifood and beveragesForestry04 agricultural and veterinary sciences021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPulp and paper industrySulfurchemistryHot-water pre-treatmentvisual_artNorway sprucevisual_art.visual_art_medium0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSawdust0210 nano-technologymetsäkuusihiilihydraatit
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Dispersal of microarthropods in forest soil

2001

Summary This experiment was a part of a research on the soil community in anthropogenous birch stands in Finland. In that study it was found that communities of Collembola are similar in birch stands of different origin (cultivated field or spruce forest), while the communities of Oribatida are essentially different. When compared to original spruce forest, the communities of both groups are different. Cultivation eliminates the populations of most microarthropod species, that have to disperse after reforestation from the surrounding areas. The aim of the experiment was to study the ambulatory dispersal of soil microarthropods. It was carried out in plastic boxes filled with an intact block…

Spruce forestAgronomySoil testbiologyEcologySoil ScienceBiological dispersalReforestationAcaribiology.organism_classificationOribatidaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCollembola <class>Pedobiologia
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Sulphur Stored in Forest Soils and the Relative Importance of Organic and Inorganic Forms. Examples from Mont-Lozère (Southern Massif Central)

1995

From studies initiated in 1981, the mean annual hydrochemical budget established in three experiment watersheds at Mont-Lozere demonstrated that sulphur is retained in soils and in arenaceous formations (Lelong et al. 1990). Soils were developed on weathered granite materials that were strongly reworked by periglacial processes. One watershed is covered with grasses (Bassin de la Cloutasse) and the two others by forest. A beech coppice (Fagus sylvatica L.) and a Norway spruce forest (Picea abies (L.) Karst., hereafter shortened to “spruce”) occupy the Bassin de La Sapine (54 ha) and the Bassin of La Latte (20 ha), respectively. Unfortunately, as a result of a parasite attack, a large part o…

Spruce forestgeographyWatershedgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPicea abiesForestryMassifbiology.organism_classificationCoppicingFagus sylvaticaSoil waterEnvironmental scienceBeech
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Abundance of narG, napA, nirK and nosZ genes of denitrifying bacteria in a Norway spruce forest under different N-deposition

2007

[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental SciencesnarGNorway[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]nosZ gene[SDE]Environmental SciencesnirKnapAN-depositiondenitrifying bacteriaspruce forest
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Invertebrates in Fruitbodies of Heterobasidion spp., Infected Picea abies Logs and Adjacent Soil

2021

Heterobasidion spp. pathogenic fungi produce conspicuous fruitbodies on infected wood, which may represent a habitat for a range of organisms, including invertebrates. The aim was to: (i) assess and compare invertebrate diversity in Heterobasidion spp. fruitbodies, infected Picea abies wood and adjacent soil

biologyRange (biology)FaunaForest SciencefungiForestryPicea abies<i>Heterobasidion</i>carpophoresbiology.organism_classificationcomplex mixturesTaxonTullgren funnelsBotanyNorway spruceAcariQK900-989HeterobasidionPlant ecologyRelative species abundancehuman activitiesfaunaInvertebrateForests
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Labile carbon addition affects soil organisms and N availability but not cellulose decomposition in clear-cut Norway spruce forests

2014

We assessed the effects of sucrose addition on the biological and chemical properties of organic soil in clear-cut Norway spruce forests managed with or without wood-ash fertilization and mechanical site preparation. Sucrose addition increased the abundances of enchytraeids and tardigrades and soil moisture percentage in the clear-cut areas. Sucrose also increased nematode abundance in the non-fertilized plots. Sucrose reduced the pool of waterextractable NH4-N in the soil in the first year, but increased it in the second year. Sucrose addition did not affect the decomposition rate of cellulose strips. The biomass of ground vegetation was not affected by sucrose. Carbohydrate addition seems…

clear-cut Norway spruce forestscomplex mixturesbiological and chemical propertiesorganic soil
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Valorization potential of technical lignins from Norway spruce (Picea abies) via pyrolysis

2022

Analytical pyrolysis (Py-GC/MS) on mg-scale of Norway spruce (Picea abies)-derived kraft lignin, ethanosolv lignin, and dried lignin-rich soda-anthraquinone (AQ) black liquors was studied at 500 °C to compare the valorization potential of these materials, focusing on the type and yield of condensable pyrolysis products. Of particular interest was the relatively selective formation of guaiacol (2-methoxyphenol) from the dried soda-AQ black liquors in contrast to the formation of complex phenolic product mixtures from the pyrolysis of the kraft and ethanosolv lignins. It was shown that this finding could be attributed to differences in composition and structure as was assessed by various NMR …

fenolitligninligniinimustalipeäbioöljytValorizationphenolspyrolysisLigninAnalytical ChemistryFuel TechnologytalteenottoPhenolsNorway sprucebiomassa (teollisuus)valorizationmetsäkuusiPyrolysisJournal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis
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ANDREA GIACOBBE, UN SELVICOLTORE CHE MERITA DI USCIRE DALL'OBLIO

2021

Andrea Giacobbe, a forester who deserves to get out from oblivion. The scientific production of Andrea Giacobbe, a Sicilian forester who worked in central and northern Italy in the last century, has been revisited. The aim is to highlights how his contribution to botany, forest ecology and forestry has been largely overlooked. He was the protagonist of a lively debate with the greatest for est scientists of his time, he produced 64 papers and books, but above all he proposed many inno vative reforestation techniques that today should be rediscovered and applied.

forest history silver fir spruce beech Sicily reforestation techniques Mediterranean forestsSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E Selvicoltura
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