BusinessMirror

DOST-FPRDI prioritize­s study of tree plantation species

- Rizalina K. Araral/s&t Media Service

THe country’s wood industries have been suffering from a shortage of raw materials for many years now. this has been caused mainly by decades of indiscrimi­nate logging which have systematic­ally reduced the areas of the country’s natural growth forests.

to help beef up the country’s wood supply, the Department of science and technology’s Forest products Research and Developmen­t institute (DOST-FPRDI) started a research program for studying different kinds of tree plantation species (tps).

According to the institute’s Dr. Dwight A. eusebio, “tps are fastgrowin­g trees that are either native or introduced to a particular place, and grown in tree farms at least half a hectare in size.”

tree farms or plantation­s became popular in the philippine­s since the 1980s, and especially in the last 10 years after the government finally imposed a logging moratorium on all natural growth forests.

tps are grown mainly as substitute­s to traditiona­l species, and those commonly found in local tree farms, include yemane (Gmelina arborea Roxb.); malapapaya (polyscias nodosa [Blume] seeman); mangium (Acacia mangium Willd.); river red gum (eucalyptus camaldulen­sis Dehnh); falcata (Falcataria moluccana [Miq.] Barneby & J.W. Grimes); large-fruited red mahogany (eucalyptus pellita F.v. Muell); large-leaf mahogany (sweitenia macrophyll­a King) and bagras (eucalyptus deglupta Blume).

“DOST-FPRDI studies tps not only because they make good constructi­on and housing materials, but also because they have a host of other industrial uses,” eusebio said. they can be used for pulp and paper, veneer and plywood, composite boards (particlebo­ard, fiberboard, etc.), power and telecommun­ication poles, and packaging materials (pallets, fruit boxes, crates, etc.).

they can also be tapped for builders woodworks (doors, windows, door and window jambs, moldings, balusters, stairs and railings, shingles and shakes, parquets, etc.), fancy woodwork, wooden shoes, pencil slats, ice cream spoons, chopsticks, matchstick­s, toothpicks and many more.

eusebio explained: “the uses of wood, of course, are dependent on its inherent qualities. For example, is the wood light or heavy? Durable or not? easy or difficult to dry, machine or finish? these are some things we need to know to determine its applicatio­ns.

“thus, for three decades now, DOST-FPRDI researcher­s from diverse fields have been looking into the properties of 15 tps [mostly eucalypts and acacias]—their anatomical, chemical, physical and mechanical, sawmilling, machining, finishing, drying characteri­stics, natural durability and treatabili­ty.”

All the informatio­n generated has consequent­ly been published in handbooks and bulletins.

“in the coming years, we are committed to conduct research and developmen­t studies on other tps that have not yet been tapped by our client-industries,” eusebio added.

According to the Forest Management Bureau of the Department of science and technology, the wood sector needs about 6 million cubic meters of raw materials a year. this is way beyond the 1 million cubic meters produced, 75 percent of which is supplied by tree plantation­s.

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