Solid wood property variations in early-age Acacia plantation trees grown in southern Vietnam

Solid wood property variations in early-age Acacia plantation trees grown in southern Vietnam

Solid wood property variations in early-age Acacia plantation trees grown in southern Vietnam

23:31 - 31/05/2021

TCVN 2019
Nghiệm thu nhiệm vụ "Nghiên cứu, thử nghiệm, đề xuất các giải pháp xử lý Mộc bản bị mủn mục"
Thẩm định sản phẩm của đề tài KHCN cấp nhà nước “Nghiên cứu sử dụng nấm mục để sản xuất bio-composite từ dăm gỗ, rơm và rạ”.

David Blackburn1, Vu Dinh Huong2, Nguyen Duc Thanh3 and Daniel Mendham1

1 CSIRO Land and Water, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

2 Forest Science Institute of South Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

3 Research Institute of Forest Industry, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Hanoi, Vietnam

Abstract

A high demand for woodchips has encouraged smallholder farmers in Vietnam to invest in short-rotation Acacia plantations to produce pulpwood that has a relatively quick, though often low, income return. Because of an expanding export furniture industry, the Vietnam Government has sought to increase sawlog production and, at the same time, improve returns to smallholder farmers. However, currently the quality and therefore market value of the timber from acacias under differing management strategies has not been well quantified. Acacia auriculiformis, both in its pure form and its hybrid with A. mangium (Acacia hybrid) are grown in plantations in Vietnam to produce merchantable timber, though the inferior mechanical properties of juvenile wood at an early age has impeded access to higher-value product markets. However, with thinning, there may be improvements in wood properties that could enhance sawlog values. This study examined how the wood properties of plantation grown Acacia hybrid change with stand age, explored differences in wood properties between Acacia hybrid and A. auriculiformis following different thinning treatments, and determined which of the two species is the most favourable for solid wood products. The potential to supply logs to produce sliced veneer for the furniture industry was also investigated. Logs from A. hybrid trees aged eight years could be processed to manufacture structural products, and at age five years for manufacturing utility furniture. Acacia auriculiformis thinned to 833 stems per hectare at age 4 years had mechanical wood properties indicating a potential for durable flooring products that can command a high value in the market. Because of dead knots, most sliced veneer samples were not acceptable for face veneer, though visual assessments indicated that with pruning, an attractive high-value product could potentially be produced. Tree species rather than age or thinning treatment had the most influence on wood properties.

 

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351069810_Solid_wood_property_variations_in_early-age_Acacia_plantation_trees_grown_in_southern_Vietnam