Pau rosa, Brazilian

(Aniba roseaodora)

Common Name(s): Brazilian pau rosa, louro pau, bois de rose, red silverballi

Scientific Name: Aniba roseaodora, written as A. rosodora by some authors; (syn. A. duckei)

Distribution: Tropical rainforests of South America

Tree Size: 65-100 ft (20-30 m) tall,

                      1.5-2.5 ft (.5-.8 m) trunk diameter

Average Dried Weight: 45.6 lbs/ft3 (730 kg/m3)

Specific Gravity (Basic, 12% MC): .63, .73

Janka Hardness: 1,460 lbf (6,470 N)

Modulus of Rupture: 18,850 lbf/in2 (130.0 MPa)

Elastic Modulus: 2,466,000 lbf/in2 (17.00 GPa)

Crushing Strength: 10,150 lbf/in2 (70.0 MPa)

Shrinkage: Radial: 4.5%, Tangential: 7.0%,

                             Volumetric: 12.1%, T/R Ratio: 1.6

Color/Appearance: Heartwood is golden to light reddish brown, sometimes with an olive or greenish hue. Color darkens with age. The contrasting sapwood is light yellow.

Grain/Texture: Grain is straight to slightly interlocked. With a medium to fine texture and good natural luster.

Rot Resistance: Rated as very durable; very good termite resistance. Good exterior weathering characteristics.

Workability: Easy to work with both hand and machine tools. Glues, turns, and finishes well.

Odor: Has a pleasant, spice-like scent while being worked. (This species has been heavily exploited for its rosewood oil, so it scent is very well regarded in the perfume industry.)

Allergies/Toxicity: Although severe reactions are quite uncommon, Brazilian pau rosa has been reported to cause skin irritation, as well as constitutional symptoms. See the articles Wood Allergies and Toxicityand Wood Dust Safetyfor more information.

Pricing/Availability: Seldom if ever available commercially today. This species has been heavily exploited in the past (primarily for distillation into rosewood oil for use as a fragrance). Logs are generally of more value processed into rosewood oil instead of timber. Expect prices to be medium to high for an imported hardwood—and likely mislabeled from the African species (Bobgunnia spp.)bearing the same name.

Sustainability: This wood species is in CITES Appendix II, and is on the IUCN Red List. It is listed as endangered due to a population reduction of over 50% in the past three generations, caused by exploitation. Historically, the great majority of this exploitation has come from the harvesting of trees into wood chips to be distilled into rosewood oil for use in fragrances.

Common Uses: Furniture, plywood, boatbuilding, turned objects, millwork, and flooring.

Comments: Nearly all common names used to describe this species are a source of confusion. The most commonly used name in English is simply pau rosa (minus the “Brazilian” qualifier which has been added to this page for clarity). Usage of this common name is eclipsed by the more common (and unrelated) African species in the Bobgunnia genuswhich bears the same common name. This misidentification is very common, and modern lumber is nearly always from the African species.

The tree is also called bois de rose, (which simply means rosewood in French), but this common name is primarily applied to a group of Dalbergia species found in Madagascar. The more specific common name Brazilian rosewood is also used to describe this species, though again, this name is used much more often to describe an unrelated species of true rosewood (Dalbergia nigra).

Adding to the confusion, this tree is the primary source of a substance known in the fragrance world as rosewood oil. Rosewood oil and rosewood timber are two distinct entities, and true rosewood (botanically from the Dalbergiagenus) has never been the source of true rosewood oil (which is itself a bit of a misnomer).

Identification:

Porosity: diffuse porous

Arrangement:  primarily radial multiples of 2-4 pores

Vessels: medium to large, few; tyloses common

Parenchyma: vasicentric

Rays: narrow to medium width; normal spacing

Lookalikes/Substitutes: Due to its conflicting common name (pau rosa), it is sometimes confused with wood from the Bobgunnia genus from Africa—containing an unrelated pair of species with the same name. However, the two are easily separated on the basis of parenchyma. Bobgunnia has wide and consistent bands of parenchyma (even visible on the face grain as light-colored, thin, contrasting streaks). Conversely, Aniba has only modest parenchyma in a vasicentric pattern.

Notes: Brazilian pau rosa, unlike most Aniba species, doesn’t fluoresce under blacklight illumination.

Preciosa (endgrain 10x)

Preciosa (endgrain 1x)

None of the above content is our original work and all credit (and any errors or omissions) is due www.wood-database.com.
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