Abstract

ABSTRACT Internal checking is a wood-drying defect that affects many tree species, including eucalypts, and can adversely affect the recovery of high-quality timber. We studied the patterns of within- and between-tree variation in wood checking from three Eucalyptus nitens silvicultural trials and determined the predictability of wood checking from wood properties. We hypothesised that changed wind exposure and inter-tree competition due to thinning would increase wood checking. In total, 144 trees from two silvicultural treatments (thinned/unthinned) and three social status classes per site (dominant/subdominant/suppressed) were sampled. Regardless of site, social status and silvicultural treatment, longitudinal and radial variation within trees was the major source of variation in checking. Checking was concentrated longitudinally in bottom logs and radially in the middle of wedges, with a shift in checking towards the cambium in the thinned treatment. On average, dominant trees in the thinned treatment had higher levels of checking than dominant trees in unthinned treatments at all sites, but the opposite trend was found for suppressed trees. Wedge checking was poorly predicted using non-destructive traits assessed on standing trees. Our models accounted for at most 22% of the variation in wedge checking and the best predictors were the destructive measures of wedge collapse. With most checking occurring in lower logs, future studies should concentrate on reducing checking in bottom logs, which are typically pruned for clearwood products.

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