CODIT stands for Compartmentalization of Decay in Trees, and sugar maples are darn good at CODIT! Mark Isselhardt, during the 2021 virtual Ohio Society of American Foresters spring meeting, gave an excellent microscopic and physiological explanation of how maple trees wall off and seal up old tapholes.
Why does understanding compartmentalization matter to a maple producer? Compartmentalization creates the all-important non-conductive wood that sugarmakers try to avoid with each year’s new taphole. And just in case you were wondering – how much does it matter? Through work conducted at University of Vermont’s Proctor Maple Research Center, Mark Isselhardt document sap yield declines of 70-75% when a taphole intersects non-conductive wood.