ken cierp wrote:"Spalting is a generic term for various forms of discoloration that can occur in wood due to invasion of the wood fibers by fungal spores, which then form colonies and continue to grow in the wood. Since spalting is a form of rot, the discoloration is usually accompanied by a degradation in the strength of the wood fibers and the wood can become quite punky and eventually just rot out entirely."
I am thinking - not a good characteristic of a guitar sound-board?
Makes sense but on the flip side, if the rot continued on a finished piece of wood, wouldn't all decorative items using spalted wood eventually become punky and rot out entirely? I can see this if the wood is still part of a live tree or laying on the forest floor, but I'd have to think once it's been shaped, cut, sanded, stained, finished etc that some sort of stability ensues or else all these decorative jewelry boxes, furniture pieces, solid body guitars etc would be structurally failing. Maybe the finishing process cuts off enough oxygen to inhibit the continuation of the rot?