Timber iQ February - March 2019 // Issue: 42 | Page 11

NEWS CLIMATE CHANGE IS MAKING THE WOOD LIGHTER With the combination of wood samples from the 1870s to the present day coupled with the latest measurement technology, the team at the School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan demonstrated that the annually growing wood has gradually become lighter since observations began: by up to 8 to 12% since 1900. Within the same period, the volume growth of the trees in central Europe has accelerated by 29 to 100%. In other words, even though a greater volume of wood is being produced today, it now contains less material than just a few decades ago. However, the explanation which immediately comes to mind does not apply. "Some people may surmise that the more rapid growth could itself be the cause for our observations," says Dr Peter Biber, co-author of the study. "In some tree species, it is in fact the case that wider annual rings also tend to have lighter wood. But we have taken this effect into account. The decrease in wood density we are talking about is due to other factors." Instead, Pretzsch and his team see the causes as being the long-term increase in temperature due to climate change and the resulting lengthening of the vegetation period. But the nitrogen input from agriculture, traffic and industry also play a part. A number of details lead experts to surmise this, such as the decrease in the density of late wood and the increase in the percentage of early wood in the annual rings. LIGHTER WOOD – WHAT'S THE PROBLEM? Lighter wood is less solid and it has a lower calorific value, which is crucial for numerous application scenarios ranging from wood construction to energy production. Less solid wood in living trees also increases the risk of damage events such as breakage due to wind and snow in forests. But the most important finding for practical and political aspects is that the current climate-relevant carbon sequestration of the forests is being overestimated as long as it is calculated with established but outdated wood densities. "The accelerated growth still results in surplus carbon sequestration," says Pretzsch. "But scaling up for the forests of central Europe, the traditional estimate would be too high by about 10 million metric tons of carbon a year." The research group at the Chair for Forest Growth and Yield Science at the TUM School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan, led by Hans Pretzsch, investigates the effect of climate change on the growth, stability and vitality of trees. An important basis for this research are the experimental plots of the Chair, on which the dynamics of forests have been measured since 1879 to answer ecological and economic questions. In the study reported here, they contribute to measuring the human footprint in forest ecosystems.