Abstract

The fast-growing hardwood, okoume (Aucoumea klaineana Pierre), is a major forest species in Gabon and is used principally for making plywood, but research into the growth and quality of this wood is scanty. Trees from natural forests are favoured for production, yet little information exists on wood characteristics from plantation trees. Therefore, we carried out a dendrochronological study along with measurements of wood lon- gitudinal modulus of elasticity (EL), density (Dw), dimensional stability parameters (longitudinal, radial and tangential shrinkage and fibre saturation point) and fibre cell morphology to determine if these properties were related to age in trees from two plantations. We then used segmented regression analysis to define the limit (breakpoint) between juvenile (JW) and adult wood (AW). Using monthly precipitation data, we were able to determine that one growth ring is formed per year, composed of a large light coloured ring formed during the long rainy season and a thick, dark band formed during the major dry season. However, thinner bands, analogous to false rings, may also form during the short dry and short rainy seasons. Ring width decreases from the pith to the bark, and the breakpoint between JW and AW was at 19 years old when trees from both plantations were pooled together. No differences in Dw or radial and tangential shrinkage occurred with cambial age. EL increased significantly up to the cambial age of 12-14 years, after which the increase with age was only slight and no breakpoint between JW and AW was found. With regard to mean longitudinal shrinkage, AW was found to form after the age of 13 years but fibre cell length was significantly longer after the age of 14.5 and 20 years, depending on the plantation of origin. Therefore, the boundary between JW and AW in plantation grown okoume occurs between the ages of 13 and 20 years, depending on the characteristic examined.

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