Abstract

Summary Pinus contorta, logs with occluded cankers caused by the pathogen Gremmeniella abietina, as well as logs from unaffected trees were sampled from a 23‐year‐old plantation in Sweden and compared in terms of their paper properties. Damaged wood gave kraft pulp with poor paper properties: it required a larger amount of beating energy and resulted in paper with low tear strength, air permeability, tensile stiffness, burst strength, and poor light‐scattering properties. However, small amounts of damaged wood mixed in with a large amount of healthy wood can pass almost unnoticed. The use of trees with a larger content of damaged wood will lead to serious processing problems and give a pulp with poor paper properties. Thus, wood damaged by Gremmeniella should be sorted out and classed as low‐grade raw material.

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