Abstract

A comprehensive testing program has been developed to assess different physical and mechanical properties of 26 commercial and lesser-known Papua New Guinea species from secondary and plantation forests. The impact of log position in a tree on the mechanical properties has also been assessed to optimize the utilization of timbers along the value chain. The results showed that stiffness and bending strength tend to decrease or remain unchanged along the stem. Shear strength and Janka hardness displayed a similar trend to a lesser extent where the position in the tree had a limited impact on compression strength properties. Thus, segregating based on log position can be of interest where desired mechanical properties and costs associated with segregating justify optimum mechanical properties for the intended end use. The properties of selected species from plantations and regrowth forests were generally lower than those found in the literature for timbers from old-growth forests. The size of specimens tested, the amount and provenance of tested material, and some adaptive traits for tropical tree species are some factors potentially explaining observed differences. However, a comparison with recent studies tends to confirm the overall reduction of physical and mechanical properties when compared with old-growth forests timbers.

Highlights

  • Papua New Guinea (PNG) is an Oceanian country located in the south-western Pacific Ocean region

  • According to the PNG Forest Authority, there are more than 2000 tree species in PNG, of which 20% are utilized in one way or another for commercial use (PNGFA 2007)

  • A group composed of Eucalyptus pellita, Homalium foetidum, and Intsia bijuga usually performed significantly better than the other tested species

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Summary

Introduction

Papua New Guinea (PNG) is an Oceanian country located in the south-western Pacific Ocean region. The country has a total land area of 46,3 million hectares of which 33,6 million ha is estimated to contain forest cover (FAO 2015). Primary and regenerated forests represent 52,4% and 47,6% of the forest area, respectively, accounting for a total growing stock of 5195 million m3. According to the PNG Forest Authority, there are more than 2000 tree species in PNG, of which 20% are utilized in one way or another for commercial use (PNGFA 2007). Commercial forest plantations started in the 1960s with sporadic progress and currently covering 62277 ha. The country aims to develop 240000 ha of commercially viable and sustainable commercial forest plantations by the year 2030 to sustain 3,6 million m3 of industrial timber currently harvested from natural forest annually

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