enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Heart pine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_pine

    Heartwood and sapwood in pinus sylvestris. The heartwood from the pine tree, heart pine, is preferred by woodworkers and builders over the sapwood, [1] due to its strength, hardness and golden red coloration. The longleaf pine, the favored tree for heart pine, nearly went extinct due to logging. Before the 18th century, in the United States ...

  3. Agarwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agarwood

    The tree defensively secretes a resin to combat the fungal infestation. Prior to becoming infected, the heartwood mostly lacks scent, and is relatively light and pale in colouration. However, as the infection advances and the tree produces its fragrant resin as a final option of defense, the heartwood becomes very dense, dark, and saturated ...

  4. Heart rot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_rot

    Spirostachys africana log with heart-rot. In trees, heart rot is a fungal disease that causes the decay of wood at the center of the trunk and branches. Fungi enter the tree through wounds in the bark and decay the heartwood. The diseased heartwood softens, making trees structurally weaker and prone to breakage.

  5. Wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood

    Heartwood formation is a genetically programmed process that occurs spontaneously. Some uncertainty exists as to whether the wood dies during heartwood formation, as it can still chemically react to decay organisms, but only once. [13] The term heartwood derives solely from its position and not from any vital importance to the tree. This is ...

  6. Trunk (botany) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trunk_(botany)

    These cells transport the water through the tree. The xylem also stores starch inside the tree. At the center of the tree is the heartwood. The heartwood is made up of dead xylem cells that have been filled with resins and minerals; these keep other organisms from infecting and growing in the center of the tree.

  7. Metrosideros polymorpha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrosideros_polymorpha

    also the tree itself. [emphasis added] Thus endorsing the common practice of referring to Metrosideros polymorpha as a lehua tree, or as an ʻōhiʻa lehua, or simply an ʻōhiʻa. [6] The genus name Metrosideros is derived from the Greek words metra, meaning 'heartwood', and sideron, meaning 'iron', and refers to the hard wood of the trees in ...

  8. Fatwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatwood

    The stump (and tap root) that is left in the ground after a tree has fallen or has been cut is the primary source of fatwood, as the resin-impregnated heartwood becomes hard and rot-resistant after the tree has died. Wood from other locations can also be used, such as the joints where limbs intersect the trunk.

  9. Porodaedalea pini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porodaedalea_pini

    It is a plant pathogen that causes tree disease commonly known as "red ring rot" or "white speck". This disease, extremely common in the conifers of North America, decays tree trunks, rendering them useless for lumber. [2] It is a rot of the heartwood. Signs of the fungus include shelf-shaped conks protruding from the trunks of trees.