Bark
Bark
Bark is the outer protective coating of the trunk and branches of trees and shrubs and includes all the tissues outside of the vascular cambium. A typical bark consists of several layers of different types of tissue. The inner bark, or bast, is living and contains the conductive tissue, called phloem, by which sugars are transported from the leaves in the crown of a tree to the roots, and from storage tissues to other parts of the plant. The outer bark is layered, with the inner layer consisting of the cork cambium, a meristem that produces cork cells to the outside. The cork cells are usually tightly packed and have fatty substances deposited in their thick walls. In contrast to the cork cambium, cork cells are dead and filled with air, making cork lightweight and insulating.
The appearance of a bark depends on the type of cork cells produced by the cork cambium, the relative amount of cambial products, and the amount of secondary conducting tissue (phloem). In some species, such as the cork oak (Quercus suber ), the cork cambium is very active and produces a thick layer of cork, which is extracted and used commercially. Other species, such as birch trees, have a papery bark because the cork cambium alternatively produces several layers of thin-walled cells. These are fragile, and the thicker layers can come off as sheets. In habitats where natural fires occur, such as tropical savannas and the pine and redwood forests of California, trees tend to have a thick, corky bark to insulate them from the heat of fires. In some arid regions many trees have chlorophyll-containing bark to continue the process of photosynthesis when the leaves are absent during long periods of drought. The varied texture and thickness of bark is often a function of the environment in which the tree grows. The variation in the structure of bark often gives a tree its characteristic appearance, for example, the hairy look of the shagbark hickory. A forester can recognize the species of trees by the differences in their bark either externally or by cutting a small slash to examine the inner structure.
Bark is used in many ways and is of considerable economic importance. Many indigenous peoples have made clothes, canoes, houses, drinking vessels, arrow poisons, and medicines from bark. Bark has also provided commercial medicines such as quinine and curare, and is also the major source of tannins for the leather industry and cork for wine bottles. In horticulture, bark is used for mulch. Some of our favorite flavors and spices, such as cinnamon and angostura bitters, come from bark. Bark is much more than the protective skin of trees; it is one of the most useful products of nature.
see also Stems; Tissues; Tree Architecture; Trees.
Ghillean T. Prance
Bibliography
Junikka, L. Survey of English Macroscopic Bark Terminology. Leiden, The Netherlands: Hortus Botanicus, 1994.
Prance, G. T., and A. E. Prance. Bark: The Formation, Characteristics, and Use of Bark Around the World. Portland, OR: Timber Press, 1993.
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James Thomson
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
James Thomson 1834-82, Scottish poet and essayist. He is...magazine of his friend Charles Bradlaugh. Thomson's life in London was lonely and impoverished...are later collections of his poems. Thomson also wrote many essays and criticisms...
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Thomson, James
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Thomson, James (1834–82), trained as an army schoolmaster...appeared in the late 1850s and in 1862 Thomson was discharged from the army, probably...M. Rossetti . For part of 1872 Thomson was with a gold company in Colorado...
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