Your search resulted in 4667 documents. Displaying 25 entries per page.
Enzyme activities of Bursaphlenchus xylophilus and associated bacteria
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11057
Bursaphelenchus xylophilus or the pine wood nematode (PWN) is the causal agent of pine wilt disease, a destructive disease that affects coniferous masses. B. xylophilus causes severe economic, environmental, and social damage. The establishment of the disease depends on the ability of the PWN to…
L Robertson, G Cebrián, D Gámez, L Fiorentini, S Rames, S Santos, M T Troya
Fungal degradation of oak timber bridges
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11058
Wood is increasingly recognised as an eco-friendly building material, but its organic nature makes it vulnerable to degradation, especially in outdoor applications exposed to moisture. This study investigates wood-decaying fungi affecting oak timber bridges…
L Schrader, J Trautner, C Brischke
Entomopathogenic organisms: Host-pathogen interactions
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11059
The management strategy of wood attacked by wood-eating insects has been until now by the application of insecticidal products used as biocides and/or repellents, or using physical treatments. This paper describes the use of entomopathogenic organisms (viruses, bacteria, fungi and…
M T Troya, S Santos, L Robertson
Microbial symbionts in the shipworm gut: a new finding resolving a century old mystery explaining how shipworms digest lignin
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11061
Shipworms, historically known for their destruction of wooden ships and coastal structures, also play a key role in carbon and nutrient cycling in aquatic ecosystems. Despite extensive research, the exact mechanisms underlying their ability to digest wood, and particularly how they digest lignin, have remained…
B Goodell, J Chambers, D V Ward, C Murphy, E Black, L B K Mancilio, G Perez-Gonzalez, J R Shipway
A comparison of methods – how to achieve a robust and conclusive durability classification of wood
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11063
The biological durability of wood is a relative and unitless size, and therefore wood species and wood-based materials are assigned to durability classes (DC). In Europe, such classes are based on a variety of measures, which can be absolute or relative to a non-durable reference…
C Brischke
DURALARCH – Suitability of selected coloured coniferous heartwoods of different origin for their use in outdoor applications
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11064
…demands on biological durability, there are only a few softwoods available that also have high density and strength characteristics. One of the most important timbers with these material properties is Siberian larch (Larix sibirica, Larix gmelinii), which is available in sufficient quantities due to its large…
C Brischke, J Appelt, G Koch, S Majer, M Nopens, R Stirling, D Wong
Multifactorial analysis of the reasons behind wood natural durability
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11065
Physical, chemical and biological properties of several wood species were investigated in order to highlight the main factors involved in wood natural durability and wood characteristic using a principal component analysis. Interaction of wood with water were evaluated using contact angle measurements to…
L-F E Nkogo, M S M Mouendou, S Dumarçay, P E Engonga, F Zannini, E Gelhaye, P Gérardin
Durability to wood decay fungi and subterranean termites of Quercus pyrenaica Wild
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11066
The use of wood has added value since it is renewable, biodegradable, and a recyclable material. For this reason, evaluating its natural durability is essential when establishing the level of protection required, depending on the designated end use. Natural durability…
S Santos, M T Troya, L Robertson, S Gutierrez, G Caballe, J L Villanueva
Evaluation of decay detection drill data – a semi-quantitative approach
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11067
…the data from the first drilling. Slight softening of the wood surface was found by pick test but not reflected in the decay drilling profiles. Several poles given low ratings by the pick test were rated higher by decay detection drilling, and several poles given high ratings by the pick test were rated lower by…
M S Austigard, J Mattsson, G Alfredsen, L Ross, N Bjerregaard Pedersen
Durability and molecular analysis of fungal communities in wood exposed above ground
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11068
The objective of the study was to explore the durability of wood exposed above ground, comprising a wide diversity of wood species and treatments and extensive assessment data on wood durability in ongoing long-term testing. Larch species and Scots pine heartwood, two tropical species ntholo and ncurri and a number of…
N Högberg, D Panov, G Daniel, N Terziev
Detecting wood-decay fungi in walls: a non-destructive approach with an electronic nose
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11070
Wood-decay fungi degrade the structural integrity and safety of wooden buildings, leading to potential hazards and reduced durability. Conventional detection methods, such as visual inspection and destructive sampling, are often impractical for concealed…
M Suzuki, T Miyauchi, S Isaji, R Naganawa
Interaction of cellulolytic enzymes with fungal cell wall polysaccharides
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11071
Wood rotting fungi are the primary agents responsible for the decomposition of wood in natural environments. These fungi secrete a variety of enzymes to degrade the chemically and structurally resistant components of the wood cell wall. Some of these enzymes…
K Fukabori, N Hattori, Y Kojima, R Iizuka, M Yoshida
Physiological characterization of a key enzyme involved in gaseous COS assimilation in the filamentous fungus Trichoderma harzianum
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11072
…organisms responsible for the biological deterioration of wood, including wood decay and surface contamination. Therefore, understanding their physiological mechanisms is important for developing effective wood preservation strategies. Most physiological studies on filamentous fungi have focused on the metabolism of…
R Iizuka, A Ono, T Suzuki, Y Katayama, M Yoshida
Distribution of Crystalline Cellulose-Binding Domain CBM104 in Wood Rotting Fungi
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11073
Wood rotting fungi play a crucial role in biodeterioration of wood. Many brown-rot fungi are known to rapidly degrade cellulose in wood despite lacking enzymes with cellulose-binding domains. This has led to the hypothesis that they rely on a non-enzymatic…
Y Kojima, N Sunagawa, M Aoki, S Tagawa, M Wada, K Igarashi, M Yoshida
Investigation of oxalic acid production in brown-rot fungi
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11074
Brown-rot fungi play a crucial role as wood decomposers in forests and are also known as the main cause of biodeterioration of wooden buildings in Japan. Therefore, understanding their decomposition mechanisms is important for the maintenance and preservation of wooden structures. While white-rot…
S Matsumoto, R Tsukida, T Ito, M Iritani, M Yoshida
Interaction between AA9 lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase and PQQ-dependent pyranose dehydrogenase in cellulose degradation
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11075
Wood-decaying fungi degrade cellulose, the primary polysaccharide in wood, as a nutrient source by utilising various hydrolytic and oxidative enzymes. Among these, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO9) has gained attention as a key enzyme that enhances…
H Murai, Y Kojima, E G Kommedal, V G H Eijsink, M Yoshida
Functional Analysis of Cellobiose Dehydrogenase from the Saprotrophic Basidiomycete Coprinopsis cinerea
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11076
The plant saprophytic fungi including wood rotting fungi secrete various extracellular hydrolytic and oxidative enzymes to degrade wood cell wall. Among these, cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) is known as a flavoheme enzyme composed of a flavin domain with FAD and a b-type heme domain. CDH oxidises…
Y Sakka, A Hosaka, M Yoshida
Exploration of flavoenzymes from the wood rotting basidiomycete Armillaria cepistipes using protein structure prediction
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11077
Wood rotting basidiomycete is one of the major organisms that cause wood deterioration. Oxidoreductases secreted by those fungi are known to play key roles in the mechanism of wood cell wall degradation. As certain extracellular oxidoreductases including…
Y Tamaru
Effect of the Cellulose-Binding Domain Associated with Xylanase on the Degradation of Softwood and Hardwood Xylan
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11078
…as a key decomposition process during the early stages of wood decay. Brown rot fungi possess multiple genes encoding hemicellulose-degrading enzymes, suggesting that enzymatic hydrolysis plays an important role in this process. Hemicellulases produced by these fungi often contain an additional domain classified as…
R Tsukida, Y Kojima, S Kaneko, M Yoshida
Natural and enhanced durability of wood exposed above ground
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11079
Understanding and predicting the durability of wood is essential for ensuring its effective use, long-term reliability, and sustainability in various applications. To address this need, the "Wood Above Ground" project was initiated in 1999 at the Danish Technological Institute (DTI) to investigate the…
R Digaitis, J Stenbaek, A W Christof, N Morsing, B Lindegaard
From Wet to Preserved: Collecting Data of Waterlogged Wood Treated with PEG in Lanyan Museum and Study the Effect of Molecular Weight on Dimensional Stability
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11080
Waterlogged archaeological wood are most commonly unearthed in Yilan County, with over one-third originating from the Yilan Agricultural School site. This study aims to analyse the current state of conservation of waterlogged archaeological wood in Yilan County and hopes to properly…
K-L Huang, P-Y Kuo
Screening of fungi capable of degradation of β-aryl ether bond from lignin model compounds by using highly fluorescent-emitting detection
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11081
…For the microbial degradation of lignin structure, wood decay fungi can non-specifically degrade the lignin polymeric structure by oxidases. Moreover, soil bacteria have unique enzymes such as β-etherases for the degradation of lignin structure in the natural environment. In contrast, there are few studies…
A Ishikawa, Y Mori, Y Ota, M Kiguchi
Real-time evaluation of connected in-ground termite stations in laboratory colonies of Coptotermes gestroi and Prorhinotermes sp.
2025 - IRG/WP 25-11082
…shows a marked preference for the neutral cartridges over wood. Analysis of the signals transmitted by the Novaterm® system reveals that, in the case of wood, variations in frequency density are low, resulting in smooth but moderate slopes on the frequency-time curves. In contrast, the neutral cartridges generate…
M Butin, F Chopinet, S Savriama, D Messaoudi
Characterization of zinc borate synthesized in laboratory and scaled-up study
2025 - IRG/WP 25-20730
The organic nature of wood makes it vulnerable to both abiotic and biotic degradation. Impregnation with chemical products is a widely used method for wood protection. Inorganic borates exhibit a unique combination of properties that make them particularly effective for this…
Laffite, E Fernandez, C M Ibañez
Evaluating the Efficacy of Arnica Extract-Based Termiticide from Berkem Biosolutions® in Subterranean Termite Control: A Comprehensive Laboratory and Four-Year Field Study
2025 - IRG/WP 25-20731
Subterranean termites pose significant threats to wooden structures. This study evaluated the efficacy of a bio-based termiticide product containing Arnica extract from Berkem Biosolutions® in controlling subterranean termites in both laboratory and field conditions. The laboratory assessments utilised…
D Messaoudi, S Khoirul Himmi, D Tarmadi, I Guswenrivo, S Yusuf