Abstract

Knowledge of the wood properties of tropical tree species is still relatively limited, so timber extraction focuses on a few abundant, large-diameter species. Very little is known about small-diameter trees, although they could be used directly as roundwood for construction. The aim of this study was to determine the natural durability of 8 candidate species for use as structural roundwood in French Guiana: Goupia glabra, Licania alba, Hymenopus heteromorphus, Lecythis persistens, Oxandra asbeckii, Pouteria bangii, Simarouba amara, Tachigali melinonii and Virola surinamensis. Samples of their wood were exposed to white rot (European and tropical), brown rot (European), and European subterranean termites (using non-choice and multi-choice tests) in laboratory conditions and subjected to screening tests adapted from European standards. Only two species were classified as durable against both fungi and termites: L. alba and P. bangii, which means they can be used without treatment as building material in tropical or temperate climates. The other species tested were classified (1) as durable but with notable differences observed in their resistance to fungi and termites respectively (G. glabra, L. persistens, O. asbeckii), (2) moderately durable (H. heteromorphus), (3) low durability to sensitive (T. melinonii, S. amara, V. surinamensis), meaning actual European standards would not let use these last species in outdoor structures without protection, despite their use by local population in traditional building. However, they could be used for building purposes with appropriate protection systems (including wood protection). The results we obtained for resistance to wood decay provide essential information to assess the potential of these eight tree species in French Guiana’s construction sector.

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