Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2011
Authors
Lone Ross Gobakken Olav Albert HøibøAbstract
Mould growth on exterior coated cladding façades is an undesirable element and will often shorten the aesthetical service life. Mould growth on painted surfaces is influenced by type and concentration of film fungicides, the paint formulation and the wood substrate itself, and wooden cladding may experience exponential fungal deterioration caused by variation in the climatic factors, often within a small limited area. The objective of this study was to gain knowledge about which factors influence surface mould growth on coated and uncoated wooden cladding in an outdoor environment, with a special attention to modified wood substrates. The data are based on evaluation of mould growth coverage on outdoors exposed wood panels consisting of different combinations of wood substrates and surface finishes. Panels were exposed on three locations; Bogesund (Sweden), Birkenes and Sørkedalen (Norway). The panels were monitored up to 4.5 years. The analysis showed that coating typology and exposure time both had highly significant influences on mould growth. Furthermore, wood substrate, temperature and relative humidity had a significant influence on mould growth, but comparatively less than coating typology and exposure time. Siberian larch heartwood, copper-organic preserved Scots pine and Scots pine heartwood performed best among the wood substrates. Heartwood as wood type was less susceptible to mould growth than a mix of sapwood and heartwood wood and pure sapwood. Acetylated Scots pine as wood substrate and Aspen as wood species had lower resistance to mould growth than the other wood substrates and wood species, respectively. The physical surface structure of a paint film also influences the mould growth. A hard model paint was significantly more susceptible than the other model paints. A soft model paint performed best, with the least mould growth coverage. Aureobasidium pullulans (deBary) Arnaud was the dominating fungal species on all the wood substrates.
Authors
Alhaji S. Jeng A. Bationo B. Waswa J. M. Okeyo F. Maina J. KiharaAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Daniele Castagneri Ken Olaf StoraunetAbstract
A long-term increase in radial tree growth has been reported in tropical (Lloyd & Farquhar 2008), temperate (Spiecker 1996, Voelker et al. 2006), alpine (Rolland et al. 1998) and boreal forests (Hofgaard et al. 1999) over the last decades. Variations in forest growth patterns have been ascribed to different causes, such as longer growing seasons due to climate warming (Hu et al. 2010), changes in land management practices (Hunter & Shuck, 2002), nitrogen deposition (Magnani et al. 2007), and atmospheric CO2 enhancement (Voelker et al. 2006). Tree-ring analyses provide detailed information on the past growth of forests. In order to assess the effect of climate change on forest growth, non-climatic variation should be removed from treering series. The effect of endogenous (inter-tree competition) and exogenous (insects attacks, fires, storms, human influence, etc.) disturbances on tree-ring series can be detected and reduced by considering trees from different sites. Furthermore, as tree-ring width generally decreases as trees grow older and larger, age-related growth trend should be removed, to preserve climatic lowfrequency variability of chronologies. Different detrending methods used to remove non-climatic variations need to be adapted to the objectives of a particular study....
Authors
Lampros LamprinakisAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Rastislav Solár Janka Dibdiakova Miroslav Mamo Frantiek Kaík Zuzana Rázgová Vladimír Vacek Jozef Sivák Milan GaffAbstract
A comparable series of specimens from spruce wood were pre-treated with sodium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide and hydrogen peroxide, or per-acetic acid sequences. The pre-treatments reduced the yield of pulps and their Kappa number noticeably, diminished the degree of polymerization moderately, and increased their brightness. One-step peroxide bleaching of pulps from the pre-treated spruce wood resulted in their higher brightness compared to bleached pulp from sound wood. From the viewpoint of improved properties of pulp, the most efficient were the sodium hydroxide/per-acetic acid and per-acetic acid/sodium hydroxide sequences. The pre-treatments did not influence mechanical strength of the obtained pulps significantly.
Authors
Igor A. Yakovlev Carl Gunnar Fossdal Tore Skrøppa Harald Kvaalen Jorunn Elisabeth Olsen Øystein JohnsenAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Nicolae Scarlat Jean-Francois Dallemand Odd Jarle Skjelhaugen Dan Asplund Lars NesheimAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Holger LangeAbstract
Spatial dependencies among environmental variables are often quantified by spatial autocorrelation functions. The latter basically assume linearity and isotropy, requirements usually not satisfied for measured data. Typical symptoms of violated assumptions are biased parameter estimations. Relaxing the assumptions of linear dependencies and isotropy, we present a conceptual generalization of spatial analysis where locally varying anisotropies in the geographical space are uncovered by investigating nonlinear dependencies among observations. The framework is illustrated by generalizing two examples: distance decay relations and spatial filtering. The proposed alternative is based on geodesic ecological and anisotropic spatial distances.
Authors
Frank MillerAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Academic – Analysis of three-dimensional grain angle variation in Norway spruce stems
Peder Gjerdrum
Authors
Peder GjerdrumAbstract
Grain angle was observed on 178 discs equally spaced along each of 24 mostly quite large spruce stems, and a general model estimated for grain angle variation along the radial distance from pith. Due to the three-dimensional approach and the large-size stems, new variability was identified, as compared to traditional two-dimensional approach applied on moderate-sized stem discs. The model standard error was 2.3º; half of this variation can be attributed to combined stem and disc effects, and half to purely random variation. Standard error for the model estimated for individual discs was 1.6 º. Observed against the stem centroid, pith angle varies randomly with average close to zero and standard deviation 2.2º. The results should be applicable for wood quality modelling and for commercial sawn timber production.