3 results match your criteria: "Institute for Wood Biology and Wood Protection[Affiliation]"

Xylem of lime trees (Tilia spp.) with wound reactions was structurally investigated by scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) as well as chemically analyzed by direct thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (DTD-GC-MS). Wound reactions in the outer xylem lead to distinct discolorations around the wound.

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Investigations concerning the qualitative and quantitative determination of the organic wood preservative component N-cyclohexyl-diazeniumdioxide (HDO) in treated timber were carried out by means of direct thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (DTD-GC-MS). It could be shown that the identification of HDO in treated pine sapwood (Pinus sylyestris L.) is relatively simple using this analytical technique.

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Structural changes in spruce and fir needles.

Environ Pollut

May 2004

Federal Research Center for Forestry and Forest Products, Institute for Wood Biology and Wood Protection, Leuschnerstr. 91, 2050 Hamburg 80, Germany.

Needles from spruce and fir trees were analyzed for histological changes induced by long-term exposure in open-top chambers to SO(2) and/or O(3) combined with acid rain. Light and electron microscopical evaluation revealed initial structural changes in the vascular bundle of fir needles, with an increased number of crushed sieve cells in the phloem. In addition the walls of young, adaxial sieve cells lacked the typical thickening usually observed in naturally aged needles.

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