Abstract

The natural variation in wood and pulp fiber quality of 15 aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx) clones, represented by 47 trees, was assessed from 4 different sites in British Columbia, Canada. Kraft pulping trials revealed substantial variation in the pulping efficiencies, illustrated by differences of 6% in total pulp yield, ∼30% differences in H‐factor required to attain a target kappa of 21, and differences of up to 2 ISO brightness units in bleachability of kappa 21 pulp. Clearly, enormous variation exists in the natural stands of aspen, and presents some exciting opportunities for selecting clonal aspen for targeted end‐product applications. A comprehensive characterization of wood chemical composition, wood density, and fiber properties indicated that pulp yield is directly related to syringyl lignin monomer composition, and not inherent wood density, regardless of geographic locations, whereas pulp bleachability and viscosity appear to be associated with the inherent cell wall thickness of the starting wood resources (fiber coarseness). These findings suggest that geographic location imparts influences on wood fiber coarseness traits, while substantial genetic variability exists on all sites.

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