No, not in those general terms. Tree bark is made up of many (trillions upon trillions) cells, but you cannot just have one cell of "tree bark" or tree bark as "one cell".
The bark of a mango tree belongs to the tissue group called dermal tissue or outer tissue.
Cells were discovered by Robert Hooke in 1663, who observed cells in tree bark.
When the phloem is dead it causes bark to form on a tree. A secondary growth in the cortex result in the bark formation a a tree
No. Bark is part of the tree, not an independent organism.
It is Heartwood. (The Older xylem cells of heartwood no longer carry water).
The cell membrane acts as a protective barrier for the cell, similar to how bark provides protection for a tree. Both structures help regulate what enters and exits the cell or tree, and also provide structural support.
It can protect it from animals, sun, insects, and weather
The bark of a mango tree belongs to the tissue group called dermal tissue or outer tissue.
The magnolia tree bark peels naturally as the tree grows, allowing for new bark to form and protect the tree.
Yes tree bark is renewable
Cells were discovered by Robert Hooke in 1663, who observed cells in tree bark.
Cells were discovered by Robert Hooke in 1663, who observed cells in tree bark.
Beavers eat mostly tree bark and the soft tissue inside of tree bark.
The tree you are referring to is likely a birch tree. Birch trees have distinctive white bark on their limbs and a darker brown bark at the base of the tree.
it will diebecause it carries food in the bark
When the phloem is dead it causes bark to form on a tree. A secondary growth in the cortex result in the bark formation a a tree
The dog began to bark at the moon.The bark on the tree was rotting.