Publication | Closed Access
FT-IR imaging microscopy to localise and characterise simultaneous and selective white-rot decay within spruce wood cells
97
Citations
31
References
2011
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyForestryAbstract Spruce WoodWood TechnologyLignin ChemistryOverall Lignin ContentBiophysicsWood ComponentSpruce Wood CellsWood FormationLigninDeforestationTransmission Fourier TransformBiologySelective White-rot DecayWood QualityWood StructureMicrobiologyWood FibreMedicineWood Modification
Abstract Spruce wood that had been degraded by white-rot fungi ( Trametes versicolor or Ceriporiopsis subvermispora) and suffered mass losses up to 17% was investigated by transmission Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) imaging microscopy. A significant marker during incipient simultaneous white-rot ( T. versicolor ) was the cleavage of glycosidic bonds of polysaccharides that preceded their metabolisation. Simultaneous white-rot processes were also characterised by a relative decrease of the overall lignin content and a relative accumulation of wood polysaccharides. No early marker was found for selective white-rot ( C. subvermispora ) that removes mainly lignin by an oxidative process. This feature was detected only in wood samples exhibiting mass losses higher than 12%. Furthermore, it was shown, that simultaneous and selective white-rot processes were unevenly distributed within the wood samples but quite evenly distributed within single tracheids.
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