the three layers is synanob selufer and cylores
1) BARKBark protects the tree2) PHLOEMPhloem transports sap that contain sugars3) CAMBIUMCambium produces new layers of phloem on the outside and of xylem4) XYLEMXylem transports water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves.
The five layers of a tree are: 1. The first layer is the bark. The bark protects the other layers. 2. If you rip off the bark of a tree, you will find the phloem layer. 3. After the phloem layer is the vascular cambium, which allows the tree to make a new bark after spring comes. This also includes the xylem tubes. 4. The sapwood layer stores the sugar the trees leaves make. Also, you get maple syrup from the sapwood of a maple tree. 5. The heartwood layer is dead xylem the tree had made past springs. The heartwood layer makes the tree steady, so the tree wont topple over too easily.
Tree bark is mostly made up of dead cells and serves as a protective outer layer for the tree. While some inner layers of the bark may still be living and play a role in transporting nutrients and water, the outermost layer is typically dead tissue.
Tree scars are typically caused by physical injuries such as wind damage, lightning strikes, animal activity, or human interaction like pruning or mechanical damage. These injuries can disrupt the tree's normal growth patterns, resulting in the formation of scar tissue on the tree's inner layers.
The tissue that looks like a tree branch with spotty cells is nervous tissue. Nervous tissue consists of neurons (nerve cells) interconnected in a branching network resembling tree branches. The "spotty" appearance is likely referring to the cell bodies (soma) of neurons located along these interconnected branches.
1) BARKBark protects the tree2) PHLOEMPhloem transports sap that contain sugars3) CAMBIUMCambium produces new layers of phloem on the outside and of xylem4) XYLEMXylem transports water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves.
The cortex of a tree is the outermost layer of tissue found beneath the bark. It is responsible for protecting the inner layers of the tree from damage and disease, as well as for transporting nutrients and water throughout the tree.
The five layers of a tree are: 1. The first layer is the bark. The bark protects the other layers. 2. If you rip off the bark of a tree, you will find the phloem layer. 3. After the phloem layer is the vascular cambium, which allows the tree to make a new bark after spring comes. This also includes the xylem tubes. 4. The sapwood layer stores the sugar the trees leaves make. Also, you get maple syrup from the sapwood of a maple tree. 5. The heartwood layer is dead xylem the tree had made past springs. The heartwood layer makes the tree steady, so the tree wont topple over too easily.
Protective tissue
Springwood is the heart of the tree trunk. Heartwood is the tissue or dead tissue. Summerwood is the out layer of the tree trunk.
Tree bark is mostly made up of dead cells and serves as a protective outer layer for the tree. While some inner layers of the bark may still be living and play a role in transporting nutrients and water, the outermost layer is typically dead tissue.
The bark of a mango tree belongs to the tissue group called dermal tissue or outer tissue.
A pine tree!
Tree scars are typically caused by physical injuries such as wind damage, lightning strikes, animal activity, or human interaction like pruning or mechanical damage. These injuries can disrupt the tree's normal growth patterns, resulting in the formation of scar tissue on the tree's inner layers.
Sapwood is the term for the soft part that finally becomes the core of a tree.Specifically, sapwood can be found between the cambium cell layer and the heartwood. It functions to transport water into the tree's foliage. It is made up of layers of newer and older wood. The older wood will harden into heartwood as newer layers are added. It therefore will turn into the core of a tree over time and with age.
It is in the wood.
it is he tree canopy