Natural Veneer

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Natural Veneer M. Bohlke Corp. 8375 N. Gilmore Road Fairfield, OH P: (513) 874-4400 mbveneer.com [email protected] Natural Veneer Enjoy our passionate pursuit of quality veneer. Quality is Everything It’s simple. We start with superior grade hardwood and softwood timber and end with the most visually enthralling veneer. This is why we travel the world in our ongoing pursuit. We are looking for the best, most unique, and veneer quality timber. Consistency From architects and yacht designers to musical instrument manufacturers, our customers rely on our consistency of top notch veneer. They count on us for the merits that have placed us at the forefront of veneer manufacturing, importing, and exporting. Technology We’ve developed and patented many manufacturing methods over the years. These innovations improved cutting quality, as well as increased yields. Because of these innovations, we’ve reduced costs for our customers. Variety & Customization You can choose from over 150 species of indigenous and imported veneers with us. Crotches, burls and hard-to-find species are available in many cuts and figure types. Choose from flat, quarter, rift and rotary cuts that are graded to your specifications. Opt for custom thicknesses ranging from 0.4 – 3.0 mm. Attention to detail, consistent quality, vast selection, and exceptional customer service make us a cut above the rest. Don’t just take our word for it, though – give us a call. Our team will put some free samples in your hands, and you can judge for yourself. Species NORTH AMERICAN INDIGENOUS IMPORTED - Continued IMPORTED - Continued Alder, Red Alnus rubra Cherry, European Prunus avium Sapele Entandrophragma cylindricum Ash, Black Fraxinus nigra Cherry, Fireland Nothofagus betuloides Satinwood Chloroxylon swietenia Ash, White Fraxinus americana Curupixa Sapium spp. Sen Kalopanax ricinifolium Basswood Tilia americana Doussie Afzelia spp. Snakewood Piratinera guianesis Beech Fagus grandifolia Ebony Diospyros spp. Sucupira Bowdichia nitida Birch Betula spp. Etimoe Copaifera salikounda Sycamore, European Acer pseudoplantanus Butternut Juglans cinerea Eucalyptus, Red Eucalyptus spp. Tamo Fraxinus mandshurica Cedar, Western Red Thuja plicata Eucalyptus Eucalyptus spp. Tauari Couratari pulchra Cherry, Black Prunus serotina Gaboon, Okoume Aucoumea klaineana Teak Tectona grandis Chestnut Castanea dentate Goncalo Alves Astronium fraxinifolium Tigerwood Lovoa trichilioides Cypress Taxodium distichum Goiabao Chrysophyllum lucentifolium Timborana Cordia goeldiana Douglas Fir Pseudotsuga menziesii Holly Ilex aquifolium Tineo Weinmannia trichosperma Elm, Gray Ulmus americana Imbuya Pheobe porosa Tulipwood Dalbergia frutescens Elm, Red Ulmus rubra Ipe Tabebuia serratifolia Walnut, Australian Endiandra palmerstonii Gum, Red Liquidamber styraciflua Iroko Chlorophora excelsa Walnut, Circassian Juglans regia Hackberry Celtis occidentalis Jacaranda Dalbergia nigra Wenge Millettia laurentii Hemlock Tsuga heterophylla Jarrah Eucalyptus marginata Willow Salix alba Hickory Carya cordiformis Jatoba Hymenaea courbaril Zebrano Microberlinia brazzavillensis Madrone Arbutus menziesii Jequitiba Cariniana spp. Ziricote Cordia spp. Maple Acer saccharum Keyaki Zelkova serrata Myrtle Umbellularia californica Kingwood Dalbergia cearensis BURL Oak, Red Quercus rubra Koa Acacia koa Amboyna Pterocarpus indicus Oak, White Quercus alba Kosipo Entandrophragma condellei Ash, Olive Fraxinus excelsior Pecan Carya illineonsis Lacewood Cardwellia sublimis Birch, Carillian Betula spp. Persimmon Diospyros virginiana Lacewood, European Platanus acerifolia Bosse Guarea cedrata Pine, Eastern Larch Larix decidua Bubinga Guibourtia tessmannii Pine, Yellow Pinus echina Laurel, Indian Terminalia alata Buckeye Aesculus articulta Poplar Liriodendron tulipifera Limba, Frake Terminalia superba Camphor Cinnamomum camphora Redwood Sequoia sempervirens Louro Preto Nectandra mollis Elm, Carpathian Ulmus spp. Sassafras Sassafras albidum Mahogany, African Khaya ivorensis Eucalyptus Eucalyptus spp. Sycamore Plantanus occidentalis Mahogany, Cuban Swietenia mahogoni Imbuya Phoebe porosa Walnut, Black Juglans nigra Mahogany, Honduras Swietenia macrophylla Laurel Nectandra elaiophora Walnut, Claro Juglans california Makore Tieghemella heckelii Lingue Persea lingue Yew Taxus brevifolia Mansonia Mansonia altissima Madrone Arbutus menziesii Marfim Balfourodendron riedelianum Maple Acer saccharum IMPORTED Meranti Shorea acuminate Mappa Populus tremula & spp. Afrormosia Pericopsis elata Moabi Bailonella toxisperma Musk Guarea excelsa Andiroba Carapa guianensis Movingui Distemonanthus benthanmianus Myrtle Umbellularia californica Angico Parapiptadenia rigida Mozambique Guibourtia ehie Oak, Brown Quercus petraea Anigre Aningeria spp. Nyatoh Palquium maingayi Oak, White Quercus petraea Aruda Ruta graveolens Oak Brown, European Quercus petraea Pimento Pimenta officinalis Ash, European Fraxinus excelsior Oak, European Quercus petraea Planetree Platanus acerifolia Aspen, European Populus spp. Olivewood Olea hochstelleri Redwood Sequoia gigantea Avodire Turraeanthus africanus Padauk, African Pterocarpus soyauxii Thuya Tetraclinis articulata Beech, European Fagus sylvatica Padauk, Andaman Pterocarpus dalbergiodes Walnut Juglans nigra Birch, European Betula spp. Paldao Dracontomelum dao Yew Taxus baccata Black Bean Castanospermum australe Parana Pine Araucaria angustifolia Bog Oak Quercus petraea Pearwood Pyrus communis Please note that all species are Boire Detarium senegalense Peroba Paratecoma peroba available in plain and quarter cut, Bosse Guarea spp. Prima Vera Tabebuia donell-smithii including all types of figure. Bubinga Guibourtia tessmannii Purpleheart Peltogyne spp. Caroba Jacaranda copaia Ramin Gonystylus macrophyllum Many species are also available Castello Gossypiosperum praecox Red Olivillo Aextoxicon punctatum in crotch and swirl veneers. Some Cedar, Lebanon Cedrus libani Rosewood, Honduras Dalbergia stevensonii species are available in dyed Cedar, Spanish Cedrela odorata Rosewood, East Indian Dalbergia latifolia colors. Please inquire. Cerejeira Amburana caerensis Santos Machaerium spp..
Recommended publications
  • Challenges of Conservation and Sustainable Management of African Rosewood (Pterocarpus Erinaceus) in West Africa
    Chapter Challenges of Conservation and Sustainable Management of African Rosewood (Pterocarpus erinaceus) in West Africa Adjonou Kossi, Houetchegnon Towanou, Rabiou Habou, Segla Kossi Novinyo, Abotsi Komla Elikplim, Johnson Benziwa Nathalie, Alaba Pyoabalo, Ouinsavi Christine A.I. Nougbodé, Quashie Akossiwoa Marie-Luce, Kokutse Adzo Dzifa, Mahamane Ali and Kokou Kouami Abstract Pterocarpus erinaceus is an endemic and threatened plant species in arid and semiarid zones of West Africa and is highly exploited for timber, animal feeding, and various medicinal uses. The species is currently native to the Guinean forest- savannah mosaic ecoregion and reported from Senegal to Cameroon. The values of the main characteristics of the P. erinaceus forest stands (density, average diameter, À average height and average stem height) vary significantly (P < 10 3) from the Guinean zone to the Sahelian zone. It has high technological performance and can be classified as heavy and very hard wood with a density of the order of 0.80 Æ 0.07 g/cm3 and an average hardness of 12 Æ 3.7 g/cm3. The species is the subject of large-scale international traffic between West Africa and Asia, which is by far the greatest threat to the species. The various uses induce repeated mutilation and increase pressures on the species resulting in a significant reduction in its natural populations. In response to this situation, measures are proposed, including large-scale plant production strategies, the definition of minimum felling diameters, policy measures, etc., to meet the restoration needs of natural stands of P. erinaceus and the fight against climate change. Keywords: Pterocarpus erinaceus, socioeconomic services, wood properties, uncontrolled logging, sustainable management, West Africa 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Complete Index of Common Names: Supplement to Tropical Timbers of the World (AH 607)
    Complete Index of Common Names: Supplement to Tropical Timbers of the World (AH 607) by Nancy Ross Preface Since it was published in 1984, Tropical Timbers of the World has proven to be an extremely valuable reference to the properties and uses of tropical woods. It has been particularly valuable for the selection of species for specific products and as a reference for properties information that is important to effective pro- cessing and utilization of several hundred of the most commercially important tropical wood timbers. If a user of the book has only a common or trade name for a species and wishes to know its properties, the user must use the index of common names beginning on page 451. However, most tropical timbers have numerous common or trade names, depending upon the major region or local area of growth; furthermore, different species may be know by the same common name. Herein lies a minor weakness in Tropical Timbers of the World. The index generally contains only the one or two most frequently used common or trade names. If the common name known to the user is not one of those listed in the index, finding the species in the text is impossible other than by searching the book page by page. This process is too laborious to be practical because some species have 20 or more common names. This supplement provides a complete index of common or trade names. This index will prevent a user from erroneously concluding that the book does not contain a specific species because the common name known to the user does not happen to be in the existing index.
    [Show full text]
  • Fruits and Seeds of Genera in the Subfamily Faboideae (Fabaceae)
    Fruits and Seeds of United States Department of Genera in the Subfamily Agriculture Agricultural Faboideae (Fabaceae) Research Service Technical Bulletin Number 1890 Volume I December 2003 United States Department of Agriculture Fruits and Seeds of Agricultural Research Genera in the Subfamily Service Technical Bulletin Faboideae (Fabaceae) Number 1890 Volume I Joseph H. Kirkbride, Jr., Charles R. Gunn, and Anna L. Weitzman Fruits of A, Centrolobium paraense E.L.R. Tulasne. B, Laburnum anagyroides F.K. Medikus. C, Adesmia boronoides J.D. Hooker. D, Hippocrepis comosa, C. Linnaeus. E, Campylotropis macrocarpa (A.A. von Bunge) A. Rehder. F, Mucuna urens (C. Linnaeus) F.K. Medikus. G, Phaseolus polystachios (C. Linnaeus) N.L. Britton, E.E. Stern, & F. Poggenburg. H, Medicago orbicularis (C. Linnaeus) B. Bartalini. I, Riedeliella graciliflora H.A.T. Harms. J, Medicago arabica (C. Linnaeus) W. Hudson. Kirkbride is a research botanist, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory, BARC West Room 304, Building 011A, Beltsville, MD, 20705-2350 (email = [email protected]). Gunn is a botanist (retired) from Brevard, NC (email = [email protected]). Weitzman is a botanist with the Smithsonian Institution, Department of Botany, Washington, DC. Abstract Kirkbride, Joseph H., Jr., Charles R. Gunn, and Anna L radicle junction, Crotalarieae, cuticle, Cytiseae, Weitzman. 2003. Fruits and seeds of genera in the subfamily Dalbergieae, Daleeae, dehiscence, DELTA, Desmodieae, Faboideae (Fabaceae). U. S. Department of Agriculture, Dipteryxeae, distribution, embryo, embryonic axis, en- Technical Bulletin No. 1890, 1,212 pp. docarp, endosperm, epicarp, epicotyl, Euchresteae, Fabeae, fracture line, follicle, funiculus, Galegeae, Genisteae, Technical identification of fruits and seeds of the economi- gynophore, halo, Hedysareae, hilar groove, hilar groove cally important legume plant family (Fabaceae or lips, hilum, Hypocalypteae, hypocotyl, indehiscent, Leguminosae) is often required of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Mozambique's Charcoals: Anatomy of Nine Native Species
    BOSQUE 36(1): 105-112, 2015 DOI: 10.4067/S0717-92002015000100011 Mozambique’s charcoals: anatomy of nine native species Carbones de Mozambique: anatomía de nueve especies nativas Cláudio Manuel Ismael Afonso a, Thaís Alves Pereira Gonçalves b, Graciela Inés Bolzon de Muñiz c, Jorge Luis Monteiro de Matos c, Silvana Nisgoski c* a Ministry of Agriculture, National Directorate of Land and Forestry, Av. Josina Machel, 537, Maputo, Mozambique, Africa. b Federal University of Parana, Doctoral Student of Forest Engineering. Av. Pref. Lothário Meissner, 632, Jardim Botânico, 80.210-170, Curitiba, PR, Brazil. *Corresponding author: c Federal University of Parana, Department of Forest Engineering and Technology, Av. Pref. Lothário Meissner, 632, Jardim Botânico, 80.210-170, phone: (55) 41 – 3360-4275, Curitiba, PR, Brazil, [email protected] SUMMARY Most of the charcoal commercially produced in Mozambique is from natural forests, including high value species. This production often negatively affects the environment and one of the main reasons is the lack of sustainable forest management techniques. To facilitate forest control, we characterize the anatomy properties of charcoal made from Afzelia quanzensis, Amblygonocarpus andongensis, Combretum imberbe, Dalbergia melanoxylon, Guibourtia conjugata, Khaya nyasica, Millettia stuhlmannii, Pterocarpus angolensis and Swartzia madagascariensis. All these species possess high commercial value. The samples were carbonized at 450 °C for 1 h. Some shrinkage-related ruptures were present in charcoals, but the structure kept good definition of the cells features and did not influence the distinction of the species. The propagation of this knowledge would relieve pressure on valuable species and may also help with control of the charcoal supply chain.
    [Show full text]
  • Pharmacological Profile of Pterocarpus Marsupium with a Note on Its Therapeutic Activity: a Review
    ISSN 2395-3411 Available online at www.ijpacr.com 32 ______________________________________________________________Review Article Pharmacological Profile of Pterocarpus marsupium with a note on its Therapeutic Activity: A Review Abhishek N* and Karunakar Hegde Department of Pharmacology, Srinivas College of Pharmacy, Valachil, Post- Farangipete, Mangalore- 574 143, Karnataka, India. _________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT Pterocarpus marsupium (Leguminosae), commonly known as Bijayasara or Asana in Bengali, Bijasal in Hindi, Indian kino or Malabar kino in English, is a large deciduous tree widely distributed in the central, Western and Southern regions of India. It is an important medicinal plant of Indian traditional system of medicines and has been used in India for several medicinal purposes. It is a good source of tannins and hence used as powerful astringent, cooling, constipating, anodyne, alternant, rejuvenating agent and also in treatment of fractures, bruises, leprosy, leucoderma, diarrhea and dysentery, passive haemorrhage, toothache and in diabetes. It is also used as anti-inflammatory, anthelmintic, analgesic and in treatment of indigestion, diabetic anaemia, gout, Rheumatoid arthritis, cough, asthma, bronchitis, greyness of hair, elephantiasis, erysipelas, urethrorrhea and ophthalmic complications. This paper reports on its pharmacognostic properties such as antidiabetic, antioxidant, analgesic, antibacterial, hepato-protective, anti-inflammatory and memory enhancing activities of
    [Show full text]
  • Wood and Paper-Based Products
    Wood and www.SustainableForestProds.org Paper-Based Products Sustainable Procurement of Sustainable Procurement of Wood and Guide and resource kit Paper-based Products World Business Council for Sustainable Development – WBCSD Guide and resource kit Chemin de Conches 4, 1231 Conches-Geneva, Switzerland Version 2 Update June 2011 Tel: (41 22) 839 31 00, Fax: (41 22) 839 31 31, E-mail: [email protected], Web: www.wbcsd.org VAT nr. 644 905 WBCSD US, Inc. 1500 K Street NW, Suite 850, Washington, DC 20005, US Tel: +1 202 383 9505, E-mail: [email protected] World Resources Institute – WRI 10 G Street, NE (Suite 800), Washington DC 2002, United States Tel: (1 202) 729 76 00, Fax: (1 202) 729 76 10, E-mail: [email protected], Web: www.wri.org www.SustainableForestProds.org Sourcing and legality aspects Origin Where do the products come from? Information accuracy Is information about the products credible? Legality Have the products been legally produced? Environmental aspects Social aspects Sustainability Local communities Have forests been sustainably and indigenous peoples managed? Have the needs of local communities or indigenous peoples Special places been addressed? Have special places, including sensitive ecosystems, been protected? Climate change Have climate issues been addressed? Environmental protection Have appropriate environmental controls been applied? Recycled fiber Has recycled fiber been used appropriately? Other resources Have other resources been used appropriately? Contributing Authors Partnership Disclaimer Disclaimer Ordering
    [Show full text]
  • Pterocarpus Indicus (Narra)
    April 2006 Species Profiles for Pacific Island Agroforestry ver. 2.1 www.traditionaltree.org Pterocarpus indicus (narra) Fabaceae (legume family) bluwota (Vanuatu); liki (Solomon Islands); narra, amboyna, rosewood, Burmese rosewood (trade names); narra, rosewood (English); New Guinea rosewood (Papua New Guinea); pinati (Samoa); santal rouge amboine (French) Lex A. J. Thomson IN BRIEF Distribution Native to Southeast and East homson Asia and to the northern and southwest Pa- t L. cific region; now distributed widely through- out the tropics. photo: Size Typically reaches 25–35 m (82–115 ft) in height with a broad canopy when grown in the open. Habitat Grows at elevations of 1–1300 m (3.3– 4300 ft) with annual rainfall of 1300–4000 mm (50–160 in). Vegetation Thrives best in riverine, closed, and secondary forests. Soils Adapted to a range of soils, growing best on deep, fertile, loamy, alluvial soils. Growth rate In optimal conditions, height growth may be 2 m/yr (6.6 ft/yr) for the first 3–4 years, slowing to about 1 m/yr (3.3 ft/yr) thereafter. Main agroforestry uses Soil stabilization, windbreaks, ornamental. Main products Timber. Yields Estimated at 5–10 m3/ha/yr (72–144 ft3/ac/yr) over a 30–40 year rotation, on opti- mal sites. Intercropping Planted as boundary and windbreak around food crops or as a living fence around pastures. Large tree, Invasive potential Has limited potential to Thurston Gar- dens, Fiji. invade undisturbed native plant communities. INTRODUCTION including southern Myanmar, Cambodia, southern China, Vietnam, Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, and Indonesia. It Narra (Pterocarpus indicus) is a briefly deciduous, majes- extends east to the northern Pacific (Ryukyu Islands/Japan, tic tree typically growing to 25–35 m (82–115 ft) in height.
    [Show full text]
  • FSC Public Search
    CERTIFICATE Information from 2018/08/28 - 14:26 UTC Certificate Code CU-COC-816023 License Code FSC-C102167 MAIN ADDRESS Name Timber Link International Ltd. Address The Timber Office,Hazelwood Cottage,Maidstone Road,Hadlow Tonbridge TN11 0JH Kent UNITED KINGDOM Website http://www.timberlinkinternational.com CERTIFICATE DATA Status Valid First Issue Date 2010-10-16 Last Issue Date 2017-01-12 Expiry Date 2022-01-11 Standard FSC-STD-40-004 V3-0 GROUP MEMBER/SITES No group member/sites found. PRODUCTS Product Trade Species Primary Secondary Main Type Name Activity Activity Output Category W5 Solid Acer spp.; Alnus rubra var. pinnatisecta Starker; Alnus brokers/traders FSC wood serrulata; Apuleia leiocarpa; Betula spp.; Castanea sativa without physical Mix;FSC (sawn, P.Mill.; Cedrela odorata; Cedrus libani A. Rich.; Chlorocardium posession 100% chipped, rodiei (R.Schomb.) R.R.W.; Cylicodiscus gabunensis (Taub.) peeled) Harms; Dicorynia guianensis Amsh., D. paraensis Benth.; W5.2 Solid Dipterocarpus spp; Dipteryx odorata; Dryobalanops spp.; wood Dyera costulata (Miq.) Hook.f.; Entandrophragma cylindricum; boards Entandrophragma spp.; Entandrophragma utile; Eucalyptus spp; Fagus sylvatica L.; Fraxinus excelsior; Fraxinus americana; Gonystylus bancanus; Guibourtia spp.; Hymenaea courbaril; Intsia bijuga; Juglans nigra L.; Juglans regia L.; Khaya spp.; Larix sibirica; Liriodendron tulipifera L.; Lophira alata; Manilkara bidentata (A.DC.) A.Chev.; Microberlinia spp.; Milicia excelsa; Millettia laurentii; Nauclea diderrichii; Parashorea spp. (Urat mata, white seraya, gerutu); Peltogyne spp.*; Pinus rigida; Platanus occidentalis L; Prunus avium; Prunus serotina Ehrh.; Pseudotsuga menziesii; Pterocarpus soyauxii; Quercus alba; Quercus petraea; Quercus robur; Robinia pseudoacacia L.; Shorea balangeran; Shorea laevis Ridl.; Shorea spp.; Swietenia macrophylla; Tabebuia spp.; Tectona grandis; Terminalia ivorensis A.
    [Show full text]
  • Species Composition and Differences in Diversity Among the Pterocarpus Officinalis Forested Wetlands of Puerto Rico
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/281543850 Species composition and differences in diversity among the Pterocarpus officinalis forested wetlands of Puerto Rico Article · January 2013 CITATIONS READS 3 187 5 authors, including: Ricardo J. Colón-Rivera Department of Natural and Environmental Resources of Puerto Rico 14 PUBLICATIONS 73 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Using stable isotope hydrology to predict the impacts of climate change at the Humacao natural reserve View project Adaptive Management of the Natural Protected Areas of Northeast Puerto Rico - a manager's log for documenting the learning process View project All content following this page was uploaded by Ricardo J. Colón-Rivera on 15 October 2015. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Caribbean Naturalist No. 4 2013 Species Composition and Differences in Diversity Among the Pterocarpus officinalis Forested Wetlands of Puerto Rico Rusty A. Feagin, Frances Toledo-Rodríguez, Ricardo J. Colón-Rivera, Fred Smeins, and Roel Lopez The Caribbean Naturalist . ♦ A quarterly peer-reviewed and edited interdisciplinary natural history science journal with a regional focus on the Caribbean ( ISSN 2326-7119 [online]). ♦ Featuring research articles, notes, and research summaries on terrestrial, fresh-water, and marine organisms, and their habitats. The journal's versatility also extends to pub- lishing symposium proceedings or other collections of related papers as special issues. ♦ Focusing on field ecology, biology, behavior, biogeography, taxonomy, evolution, anat- omy, physiology, geology, and related fields. Manuscripts on genetics, molecular biol- ogy, anthropology, etc., are welcome, especially if they provide natural history insights that are of interest to field scientists.
    [Show full text]
  • The Hongmu Challenge: a Briefing for the 66 Th Meeting of the CITES Standing Committee, January 2016 Acknowledgements
    The hongmu Challenge: A briefing for the 66 th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee, January 2016 ACKNOwLEDgEmENTS This briefing was written and edited by the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA). INTRODUCTION This document has been produced with the financial assistance of UKaid, the European Union, the Norwegian Agency for Development The Hongmu sector is a significant Cooperation (NORAD), The Tilia Fund and Good Energies Foundation. The contents of this threat to the select group of timber publication are the sole responsibility of EIA. species targeted and constitutes a pressing conservation challenge for CITES and its Parties. January 2016 Since 2009, Asian demand has boomed for luxury furniture made with rare, high-value and deeply © Environmental Investigation Agency 2016 hued rosewoods, mahoganies and ebonies. Principally targeting 33 species within the All images © EIA unless otherwise stated. Pterocarpus , Diospyros , Dalbergia , Millettia and Cassia genera, sales in China’s Hongmu sector Report design: exceeded $25 billion in 2014. www.designsolutions.me.uk The sector is driving systematic illegal and unsustainable extraction at unprecedented rates and scales. Across Asia, Africa and Latin America, the nature of the industry is the same – unsustainable extraction leads to domestic protection which is then undermined by smuggling aided by corrupt officials; finally, better- governed range states seek CITES protections. Once CITES regulations come into force or when resources become exhausted, the criminal networks underpinning the trade are able to move quickly between species and countries. Key consuming countries – China and Vietnam – have no enforceable controls against illegally logged timber imports. CITES empowers these environmenTal invesTigaTion agenCy (eia) Parties as enforcement partners.
    [Show full text]
  • Pterocarpus Macrocarpus Kurz
    Pterocarpus macrocarpus Kurz JOHN K. FRANCIS International Institute of Tropical Forestry, USDA Forest Service FABACEAE (BEAN FAMILY) Lingoum macrocarpum (Kurz) O. Ktze., Lingoum cambodianum Pierre, Lingoum glaucinum Pierre, Lingoum gracile Pierre, Lingoum oblongum Pierre, Lingoum parvifolium Pierre, Lingoum pedatum Pierre, Pterocarpus cambodianus Pierre var. calcicolus Craib Burma padauk, pradu, terocarpus Pterocarpus macrocarpus grows naturally throughout the Pterocarpus macrocarpus produces a timber with heart- greater part of Burma, northern Thailand, Kampuchea, and wood that varies from golden brown to brick red. It is compa- into Vietnam (Carrapiett 1960, Hundley 1956, Suvarnasuddi rable in workability to inferior quality teak. Used for furniture, 1950). It is an associate with Tectona grandis L.f. in moist to cabinetry, flooring, ship timbers, cart wheels, tool handles, house dry deciduous forests. framing, and posts (Chudnoff 1984, Hundley 1956, Rendle Pterocarpus macrocarpus is a large tree with a medium 1970), the wood is very resistant to termites and rot (Carrapi- growth rate. It develops long and relatively straight boles in ett 1960). A visually pleasing tree, P. macrocarpus is planted closed forest, but as an open-grown tree, tends to have short throughout the moist tropics as an ornamental and shade tree boles and spreading crowns. In their native range, these trees (Rojo 1972). However, older trees have large roots that run seldom exceed 30 m in height and 70 cm d.b.h. (Hundley along the surface of wet or clayey soil and have a high propen- 1956). However, as ornamentals, P. macrocarpus trees may sity to damage sidewalks and curbs (Francis and others 1996). reach impressive sizes.
    [Show full text]
  • Collecting Pterocarpus Erinaceus Samples from Senegal for Dendroclimate Analyses
    Collecting Pterocarpus erinaceus samples from Senegal for dendroclimate analyses Brendan M. Buckley1 and Matthew I. Palmer2 1 Tree Ring Laboratory, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 2 Dept. of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University Introduction Dendroclimatology is an important tool for extending instrumental records of climate back in time. Africa has very few published paleoclimate records, particularly with an annual resolution like those obtained from tree rings. However large portions of Africa are particularly susceptible to the deleterious effects of projected changes in rainfall variability and would benefit greatly from a detailed paleoclimate perspective. Senegal is situated just north of the equator in western Africa along the southern edge of the Sahara desert (Figure 1). As such it is in a highly vulnerable location with regards to shifting rainfall regimes. We propose to develop a dendro-climatology/ecology project in Senegal based initially on Pterocarpus erinaceus (Figure 2) for the study of past rainfall variability for the past 2 centuries or more. P. erinaceus is a close relative of P. angolensis which has been successfully used to reconstruct rainfall from Zimbabwe by Therrell et al. (2006) (Figure 3). Both species produce highly prized lumber and are therefore being increasingly exploited. In March of 2007 we supplied funds to a Columbia University student, Demetri Blanas, who was conducting fieldwork in Senegal for his senior thesis (supervised by Dr. Matthew Palmer), to collect P. erinaceous samples to evaluate for dendroclimatology. Mr. Blanas returned to the TRL on April 20 with 7 cross sections from recently felled trees that quite clearly exhibit ring formation to the naked eye (see Figure 2).
    [Show full text]