Genetic control of pulp and timber properties in maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait.)

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Abstract

Wood is one of our most important natural resources and has been exploited for many hundreds of years as fuel, building material and a source of paper. Its composition is variable among and within species. The ability to monitor the intra-specific variability is a prerequisite to improve wood and end-products properties. This paper describes a study of the genetic control of a large set of wood properties, including growth, timber quality traits, wood chemical composition, kraft pulp production parameters and pulp properties, in a 12 × 12 half diallel of maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait.). While relatively high (hns2 > 0.3) narrow-sense heritabilities were observed for density heterogeneity, lignin content, alpha-cellulose content and coarseness, no significant genetic effect was detected for hemi cellulose, water extractives, kraft pulp production parameters and pylodin. Slightly lower heritabilities (0.15 < hns2 < 0.3) were also obtained for wood density and fibre properties (length, width, curl, zero span). As a consequence and considering the phenotypic coefficient of variation obtained for these traits, improvement by selection of trees with outstanding wood quality is feasible. Nevertheless, it seems obvious that wood quality breeding can not be done without taking into account growth, and the only way to manage this constraint (negative correlation between growth and density) will be the constitution of elite "wood quality" populations in a already growth improved genetic population.

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Pot, D., Chantre, G., Rozenberg, P., Rodrigues, J. C., Jones, G. L., Pereira, H., … Plomion, C. (2002). Genetic control of pulp and timber properties in maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait.). In Annals of Forest Science (Vol. 59, pp. 563–575). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/forest:2002042

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