2021-03-24T14:08:13Z
2021-03-24T14:08:13Z
2020-02-03
2021-03-24T14:08:13Z
Formation of extractive-rich heartwood is a process in live trees that make them and the wood obtained from them more resistant to fungal degradation. Despite the importance of this natural mechanism, little is known about the deposition pathways and cellular level distribution of extractives. Here we follow heartwood formation in Larix gmelinii var. Japonica by use of synchrotron infrared images analyzed by the unmixing method Multivariate Curve Resolution - Alternating Least Squares (MCR-ALS). A subset of the specimens was also analyzed using atomic force microscopy infrared spectroscopy. The main spectral changes observed in the transition zone when going from sapwood to heartwood was a decrease in the intensity of a peak at approximately 1660 cm-1 and an increase in a peak at approximately 1640 cm-1. There are several possible interpretations of this observation. One possibility that is supported by the MCR-ALS unmixing is that heartwood formation in larch is a type II or Juglans-type of heartwood formation, where phenolic precursors to extractives accumulate in the sapwood rays. They are then oxidized and/or condensed in the transition zone and spread to the neighboring cells in the heartwood.
Article
Versió publicada
Anglès
Espectroscòpia infraroja; Química de la fusta; Infrared spectroscopy; Wood chemistry
Frontiers Media
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.01701
Frontiers in Plant Science, 2020, vol. 10
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.01701
cc-by (c) Piqueras, Sara et al., 2020
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es