How Does a Tree Grow? (Terms appearing in Bold Print may be found in the Glossary of Tree Terms)
Trees grow in two ways. In a young shoot, bundles of cells form. These are a primary kind of wood known as provascular tissue. As the shoot grows, a layer of cambium forms across and between the primary bundles where each year, cells in this layer divide and grow. As the cambium divides, wood and bark cells form. Cells pushed outward form the bark which eventually splits and falls off and is replaced. A tree's upward growth occurs at the tip of each twig. (See diagram below). The inward growth of the cambium forms the main part of the trunk and is called xylem. Tiny tubes which transport water and minerals from the roots up the trunk and branches to the leaves make up the xylem. Leaves need this water to help them make food from sunlight. The outward growth is protected by a layer of phloem. The phloem is made up of tiny tubes that transport the sugars from the leaves to the rest of the tree. If the phloem is damaged the tree will die. Roots may not go down deep but they can spread outward as far as the tree is tall. Roots anchor trees to the soil and absorb water and soil minerals needed for growth. Some trees have deep tap roots; others have a spreading system of roots. Roots as they push through the soil are aided by a cap that forms over the tender growing point of each root. Beyond this point, myriads of root hairs extend into the soil, increasing increasing the surface area of the root and increasing the amount of water the tree can take up.
Tree Growth
From Fun With Science: Trees and Leaves,
Rosie Harlow and Gareth Morgan, Warwick Press, 1991 In some trees a difference in color exists between the outer part of the wood, the sapwood or alburnum, and the inner part, the heartwood or duramen. The sapwood is the light part of the wood as seen in cross section. It is the most recently formed wood, the circle farthest from the central cylinder. Sapwood is the physiologically active part of the wood through which the sap rises and has a high level of humidity. Thus, it is susceptible to rot and vulnerable to attack by fungi and insects. The heartwood is the part of the trunk nearest the center, the older part, which makes up the greater part of the trunk. It is simply a form of the sapwood modified by aging, and differs from it in its greater compactness and darker, more intense color. Humidity is lower in heartwood and its cells walls are thickened by deposits of tannins, resins, starchy substances, coloring matter and oils. This part of the plant is already dead, performing only the functions of support and storage.
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Trees expand from a thin layer under the bark called the cambium. THis lays down tissue all year but the cells vary in size depending on the seasons, hence the annual growth rings seen when cutting a tree.
Plants grow tall just as we do- Through care, water, and food. The only difference is that Plants use photosythasis to obtain their food, so you don't have to get any! (If it is a healthy plant.)
plant it in the winter, and let it dry out like any other plant and it will grow, grow, grow! BUT, growing trees can be hard. and also very dificult to throw at people.
Plants get taller when material is created in the growth process. This material is added a nutrients and photosynthesis takes place.
There are thousands of different trees. Be a little more specific.
The tree trunks are cylindrical because they grow from the center and outwards. They grow uniformly and this is evident from the rings when the trees are cut.
Tree trunks are straight and branchless in their lower parts in their efforts to grow tall.
Not a plant it can be any tree. And no plants grow on any trunks
The wind, objects that prevent the tree from growing upwards.
Tree trunks are straight and branchless in their lower parts in their efforts to grow tall.
The mangrove trees can have many trunks, but the banyan tree has both multiple trunks and above-ground "prop roots" that can grow vertically and horizontally.
Many plants which are called epiphytes grow on tree trunks. They are adapted to grow there as orchids , lichens etc.
the roots underneath the trunk let the tree grow
Tree trunks is that trees middle position.
tree trunks have xylem and phloem
Trunks
Lichen is a combination of fungus and algae. It grows on tree trunks.