INTERNATIONAL BIODETERIORATION & BIODEGRADATION, cilt.75, ss.104-108, 2012 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
New approaches for wood protection based on green technologies have increased interest in using
heartwood portions of certain wood species for the effects (toxic and antioxidant properties, chelate
formation, hydrophobicity) of extractives located in heartwood. This study evaluated the biological
performance of heartwood of Liquidambar orientalis Mill., trees well-known for production of balsam.
Heartwood specimens were subjected to soil-block decay tests based on the American Wood Protection
Association standard method using two brown-rot and two white-rot fungi. Specimens were also subjected
to two different laboratory termite resistance tests. Additionally, heartwood specimens were
tested for mold growth and resistance to furniture beetle larvae. Laboratory fungal decay resistance tests
showed that the heartwood of the tree was not resistant against the fungi tested; however, the wood was
resistant against termites and furniture beetle larvae in laboratory conditions. Mold tests revealed that
the wood also showed resistance to mold growth. Complete biological resistance was not achieved in this
study, suggesting that heartwood extractives do not directly correspond to resistance to wood-degrading
fungi.