Biological-degradation, lignin performance and physical-chemical characteristics of historical wood in an ancient tomb
- PMID: 40441799
- DOI: 10.1016/j.funbio.2025.101588
Biological-degradation, lignin performance and physical-chemical characteristics of historical wood in an ancient tomb
Abstract
Biodeterioration assessments of archaeological woods, also comparisons with recent wood, provides an effective strategy for its conservation in cultural-heritage. This research aimed to analyze some wooden structures of an ancient tomb, situated in West-Azerbaijan province of Iran adjacent to Lake-Urmia. The anatomical characteristics of historical wood (HW) was investigated to identify species and trace xylem micro-morphological variations in detail. Chemical-changes of deteriorated wood were examined using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, and its wood-water interactions were compared with the recent new-wood. Macro/micro-morphological and mycological assessment of historical poplar wood (Populus alba) confirmed signs of soft-rot fungi, and recent attacks by wood-boring (Xylophagous) insects probably due to local climate-change. Type-I microcavities and advanced soft-rot decay caused cell-walls depletion or deformation, which was visually observed in HW by discoloration and transverse-cracks. Based on Optical- and SEM-microscopy, lignin preservation was observed in the middle-lamella and especially the vessels rich in guaiacyl-lignin (G-type) units. However, the fiber walls were susceptible to fungal degradation due to syringyl-lignin (S-type). Histochemical changes increased the porosity, hygroscopicity, and especially water-absorption (1h-720h) of HW compared to the corresponding new-wood, introducing the severity of damage and treatability criteria for conservationists. Lignin increment, loss of cellulose-crystallinity in XRD (70.5 to 59.9 %) and FTIR ratios (1280/1200, 1317/1336), and also preferential-degradation of polysaccharides were confirmed through chemical analyses of soft-rot decayed wood. These findings, in addition to helping monitor potential risks of wooden artifacts, especially non-durable species, facilitate preventive and protective management of archaeological-heritage in both wet and dry environments.
Keywords: Ascomycota; Cellulose crystallinity; Cultural heritage; Soft-rot fungi; Wood deterioration; Wood-decay fungus.
Copyright © 2025 British Mycological Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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