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Environmental Sciences Proceedings
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12 November 2020

Bark Characteristics of Scots Pine Logs †

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1
Department of Forest Utilization and Timber Markets, Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development, 16225 Eberswalde, Germany
2
Landeswaldoberförsterei Chorin, Landesbetrieb Forst Brandenburg, 16225 Eberswalde, Germany
3
Department of Forest Harvesting, Logistics and Amelioration, Technical University Zvolen, 96001 Zvolen, Slovakia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
This article belongs to the Proceedings The 1st International Electronic Conference on Forests—Forests for a Better Future: Sustainability, Innovation, Interdisciplinarity

Abstract

The wood of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) shows good properties as building and construction timber but also as furniture or pulp and paper, and thus, is one of the most commercially important European tree species. Scots pine are mostly harvested and processed with a high degree of mechanization. In Northeast Germany (federal states of Brandenburg and Berlin), 36% of harvested Scots pine have a diameter at breast height (DBH) between 7 and 19.9 cm. As a typical industrial wood assortment, a large proportion of the resulting small-sized logs are used in the wood industry to produce boards. Although bark is considered a by-product or waste product of the industry, no actual study has quantified the bark thickness, bark volume, bark mass and bark damage of such Scots pine logs. Therefore, the bark characteristics from 50 logs from 10 different piles were analyzed. Bark volume was quantified using the water displacement method, bark mass by weighing, bark thickness with a precision caliper and bark damage by tape measurements. The diameters of the analyzed 150 log discs were normally distributed and the mean value was 12.9 cm. The results showed average bark damages from 12.0%, which were mostly caused during the felling and processing of logs with the harvester. No significant correlation was found between double bark thickness (mean: 3.0 mm) and the diameter; whereas fresh bark volume (mean: 5.6%) and dry bark mass (mean: 3.3%) were significantly affected by the diameter. As shown for spruce by other authors, bark characteristics may change over time and therefore, should be measured regularly. Moreover, it was shown that bark parameters are site dependent. Thus, quantifying bark characteristics for economically important tree species at both the local and national scale is of great relevance. More detailed analyzes are described by Berendt et al. (2021) [].

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/IECF2020-08020/s1.

Data Availability Statement

The datasets analyzed during this study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Reference

  1. Berendt, F.; Pegel, E.; Blasko, L.; Cremer, T. Bark proportion of Scots pine industrial wood. Eur. J. Wood Wood Prod. (Holz als Roh- und Werkstoff) 2021, 128, 268. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
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