Christine Kalembe Mwanja , Nasko Terziev , Romanus Ishengoma , Abwoli Banana , Fred Kalanzi
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Bamboo samples exposed to <em>G. trabeum</em> had lower surface hyphal coverage compared to those exposed to <em>C. puteana and T. versicolor</em> irrespective of the preservative used<em>.</em> Samples treated with borax-boric acid were in durability class I compared to those treated with crude lake salt that were between class II and III according to European standard. The lowest mass loss for bamboo treated with crude lake salt was 5.9 % in <em>O. abyssinica</em> exposed to <em>G. trabeum.</em> The highest mass loss for bamboo treated with crude lake salt was 14.24 % in <em>B. vulgaris</em> exposed to <em>T. Versicolor</em>. The study confirmed that while artisans use crude lake salt as a traditional preservative, it does not protect against white and brown rot while all concentrations of borax-boric acid provided protection against all fungi.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":100040,"journal":{"name":"Advances in Bamboo Science","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2773139124000375/pdfft?md5=c957272b6e8f0efa412f2309a9b1bcfe&pid=1-s2.0-S2773139124000375-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Fungal degradation of bamboo treated with crude lake salt and a mixture of borax and boric acid\",\"authors\":\"Christine Kalembe Mwanja , Nasko Terziev , Romanus Ishengoma , Abwoli Banana , Fred Kalanzi\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.bamboo.2024.100092\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>This study compared the effectiveness of crude lake salt, a traditional preservative used by artisans in Uganda, and borax-boric acid, a conventional preservative, against fungal degradation. Using the European standard, an experiment was set up to determine the durability of <em>Oxytenanthera abyssinica, Oldeania alpina</em> and <em>Bambusa vulgaris</em> treated with 2 % and 6 % crude lake salt and borax-boric acid against <em>Gloeophyllum trabeum, Coniophora puteana</em> and <em>Trametes versicolor</em>. Mass loss comparisons between treated and untreated bamboo samples were made. Durability classes were assigned according to the amount of mass lost. Bamboo samples exposed to <em>G. trabeum</em> had lower surface hyphal coverage compared to those exposed to <em>C. puteana and T. versicolor</em> irrespective of the preservative used<em>.</em> Samples treated with borax-boric acid were in durability class I compared to those treated with crude lake salt that were between class II and III according to European standard. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究比较了粗湖盐(乌干达工匠使用的一种传统防腐剂)和硼砂-硼酸(一种传统防腐剂)对真菌降解的效果。根据欧洲标准,实验确定了经 2% 和 6% 粗湖盐和硼砂-硼酸处理的 Oxytenanthera abyssinica、Oldeania alpina 和 Bambusa vulgaris 对 Gloeophyllum trabeum、Coniophora puteana 和 Trametes versicolor 的耐久性。对处理过和未处理过的竹子样本进行了质量损失比较。根据质量损失量划分耐久性等级。与暴露于 C. puteana 和 T. versicolor 的竹子样品相比,暴露于 G. trabeum 的竹子样品无论使用哪种防腐剂,其表面菌丝覆盖率都较低。根据欧洲标准,用硼砂-硼酸处理过的竹子属于耐久性 I 级,而用粗湖盐处理过的竹子属于 II 级和 III 级。用粗湖盐处理过的竹子质量损失最小,暴露在 G. trabeum 下的 O. abyssinica 为 5.9%。用粗湖盐处理过的竹子的质量损失率最高,为 14.24%。研究证实,虽然工匠们使用粗湖盐作为传统的防腐剂,但它并不能防止白腐和褐腐,而所有浓度的硼砂-硼酸都能防止所有真菌。
Fungal degradation of bamboo treated with crude lake salt and a mixture of borax and boric acid
This study compared the effectiveness of crude lake salt, a traditional preservative used by artisans in Uganda, and borax-boric acid, a conventional preservative, against fungal degradation. Using the European standard, an experiment was set up to determine the durability of Oxytenanthera abyssinica, Oldeania alpina and Bambusa vulgaris treated with 2 % and 6 % crude lake salt and borax-boric acid against Gloeophyllum trabeum, Coniophora puteana and Trametes versicolor. Mass loss comparisons between treated and untreated bamboo samples were made. Durability classes were assigned according to the amount of mass lost. Bamboo samples exposed to G. trabeum had lower surface hyphal coverage compared to those exposed to C. puteana and T. versicolor irrespective of the preservative used. Samples treated with borax-boric acid were in durability class I compared to those treated with crude lake salt that were between class II and III according to European standard. The lowest mass loss for bamboo treated with crude lake salt was 5.9 % in O. abyssinica exposed to G. trabeum. The highest mass loss for bamboo treated with crude lake salt was 14.24 % in B. vulgaris exposed to T. Versicolor. The study confirmed that while artisans use crude lake salt as a traditional preservative, it does not protect against white and brown rot while all concentrations of borax-boric acid provided protection against all fungi.