The CORK® mark and the safeguard of cork oak forest sustainability.

2010 
The importance of industrial products, most particularly the cork stopper, as the backbone of cork oak forest sustainability is addressed. The depreciation of the cork stopper economical value would trigger the decline of the cork oak forests and all their irreplaceable environmental values. Economical deterioration may be a serious declining factor for forests, in ultimate circumstances highly devastating. Cork is one of the finest barks at the forest realm, yet most of its uses are inconspicuous. In spite that cork and cork products are environmentally friendly an increase concurrence from synthetics is ongoing, specially at the stopper. The need to defend and promote cork and all its ecological values near the consumers drove the cork oak network from FAO/Silva Mediterranea to promote the creation of the CORK® mark. The CORK® mark logo patent in wine bottles to make the stopper “visible” is a must to allow the consumer to identify the type of closure. Discrimination of wines at the basis of natural/synthetic closure is an added value for cork oak forests as well as for wines. Le Symbole du Liege et la defense des forets de chene liege Resume Le role des usages industriels du liege, surtout les bouchons en tant qu’epine dorsal du valeur economique des forets de chene liege est adresse. Complementaire a l’exploitation economique du liege les suberaies offre support pour autres usages du sol de grande importance pour le monde rural comme le pâturage. Les produits de liege, particulierement les bouchons, soufre la concurrence des produits synthetiques. Pour defendre le liege en tant que produit vital pour la manutention des suberaies, en tant que produit ecologique que gere du travaille dans le monde rural, le groupe chene-liege de la FAO /Silva Mediterranea a dynamiser la creation du logo CORK®. Le but c’est promouvoir la imprimant du logo CORK® a l’exterieur des bouteilles porque le consommateur puisse savoir le type de bouchon avant ouverture et donc discriminer les vins et boissons spiritueuses aussi sur le bouchon. keywords –cork stopper, cork oak, Quercus suber, synthetic closure, cork mark The e Cor r k® mar r k Economical depreciation adds to various others factors to blame for forest declining. Abandonment, reduction on area, fragmentation, increase of inbreeding within the remaining scattered small populations, invasion from exotic species and substitution for other species or for non-forestry uses are common consequences following the economical loss at forest species. Driven by Human behaviour economical depreciation is hence a biotic weakening factor on forests. Neglected forest species are at present liable of dramatic deterioration that finds no comparison on previous epochs. Overwhelming Human pressures on the use of soil together with powerful tools to clear the forest land from the trees put in place during the XX century brought new scale on the dimension of the menaces that strike the neglected forest species. The defence of the economical sustainability is of critical importance to many species. The threat for the cork oak system coming from cork-substitute synthetic closures for wine and spirits stirred the creation of the CORK® mark, a logo for identification and defence of the cork stopper. Restricted to western Mediterranean (Fig. 1) cork oak (Quercus suber L.) is the only species that produces a cork of fine quality, the only cork appropriated for stopper making. Figure 1-Cork oak (Quercus suber L.) natural distribution. Cork oak owns the status of major species to the stopper, an industrial product which added value sustains cork harvesting and other uses at the soil under-canopies. Cork oak forests are in a high economical rate at the Mediterranean forest scenario and provide irreplaceable values on the ecological and social aspects and host a rich biodiversity. Cork oak forests provide diversified work that drives social benefits on human-depressed zones of the Mediterranean rural world that any of its potential substitutes may ever do. Before the systematic use of cork as the principal raw-material for sealing glass bottles for wine, beer, spirits and medicaments cork had a modest use, mainly at floating for fishing nets and cork oak was a neglected species. For more than three centuries production of stoppers has been the driving force for sustainable management of cork oak forests (Fig 2). Stopper production uses about 20% of the cork while generating more than 80% of the added value. Figure 2The stopper is the critical economic product and the driving force of cork oak system sustainable management, a unique forest tree from the Western Mediterranean basin. The remains left after making stoppers are used to make a wide range of products (Fig 3), including insulation panels, floor and wall tiles and sound-proofing in the car industry, as well as for handicrafts and artistic uses. Figure 3The remains left after stoppers perforation alows the competitiveness of a wide range of products, in themselves stopper dependent also, since their economical value is insufficient to keep the sustainable economical exploitation of cork. A number of high-value, low-volume ‘niche’ products are also made from cork, such as cork “paper”, a thin slice of cork obtained from cork board. Cork paper is used in printing, book covering, clothing manufacture, cork “maroquinerie” and other products. Tops for luxury badminton shuttlecocks, handles for fishing rods and special devices for the space industry also profit from properties of cork. Yet all these products are stopper-dependent since none generates economical turnover enough to sustain cork economic exploitation. If the cork stopper loses value cork oak system could go into collapse and cork oak forests would suffer irretrievable substitution for other economical more attractive species such as Eucalyptus and pines or for agriculture and urban uses. The man-managed forests of cork oak shelter wildlife that finds no habitat on pines or eucalyptus forests. Due to the cork stopper economical value cork oak escaped from the wave of substitution that devastated other oaks when the large afforestation programmes for Pinus pinaster and Eucalyptus were implemented in Portugal during the XX century.
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