Abstract

Key messageFungal infection was outlined as a potential reason for the onset of indented annual growth ring formation during the juvenile phase of hazel wood growth. Annual growth ring indentations resulted from the formation of disturbed zones which originated solely in close proximity to leaf traces.ContextHazel wood is an abnormal type of woody tissue that is formed as a result of exogenous stimuli that may trigger long-term responses in the cambium. Cambial responses produce anatomical alterations in the surrounding xylem tissue that can be observed as an indentation of annual growth rings. The chemical profiles of lignan hydroxymatairesinol may provide an indication of its possible role in the protection of a living tree against the spread of a fungal or microbial infection at the onset of indentation.AimsThe objectives of this study were to reveal the anatomical differences in the altered woody tissue of Picea abies hazel wood at both the onset and the later stages of annual growth ring indentation and to determine the chemical profiles for hydroxymatairesinol upon elicitation by a fungal infection in the disturbed zones.MethodsLight and scanning electron microscopy observations were carried out on radial, tangential, and cross sections of hazel wood zones separated from P. abies stems. Concentrations of hydroxymatairesinol were determined for both the disturbed zones and the non-indented zones using a gradient high-performance liquid chromatography.ResultsThe formation of disturbed zones was accompanied by significant changes in both the direction and width of the tracheids which produced an abnormal formation of intertwined and twisted tracheids. Fungal hyphae, radial cell wall cracks, and unusually large cross-field pitting were all found in the tracheids of the disturbed zones.ConclusionThe content of hydroxymatairesinol in the acetone extract determined from the disturbed zones was 3.4 times greater than that present in the non-disturbed tissues. By means of vascular dysfunction in the leaf traces, host trees responded to the fungal infection by plugging the lumens of conductive leaf trace tissue and filling the vascular pathway with polyphenolic compound deposits.

Highlights

  • Figured wood describes certain well-defined patterns of wood found in many tree species

  • This growth pattern refers to a particular type of figured wood, called Bhazel wood^ because of its close resemblance to the wood of various hazel species containing wide aggregate rays

  • From the 51 examined hazel wood zones, 47 showed the onset of indentation in the second annual growth ring, and four other zones were identified in the third annual growth ring

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Summary

Introduction

Figured wood describes certain well-defined patterns of wood found in many tree species. One of the abnormal growth patterns of the annual growth ring is known as hazel growth or BHase1wuchs^ and was first described by Ziegler and Mertz (1961) in Picea abies wood This growth pattern refers to a particular type of figured wood, called Bhazel wood^ because of its close resemblance to the wood of various hazel species (genus Corylus) containing wide aggregate rays. The result is the formation of lenticular depressions in the wood (Beals and Davis 1977) This phenomenon, referred to as an indentation of annual growth rings, describes local alterations in the annual growth ring shape induced by an anomalous dysfunction of the cambium. In cross sections of P. abies wood, annual growth rings are dipped towards the pith, whereas in radial sections, depending upon the reflection of light, the indentation invokes the impression of irregularly positioned wavy or curly zones of grains

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