The Three Main Parts Of A Tree
The trunk, limbs, branches and twigs hold the leaves in position to
receive the life-giving sunlight and air; they also act as
transportation, carrying raw materials between roots and leaves. The
materials absorbed by the roots are pulled up by capillary attraction
and the osmotic action induced by evaporation of water from the leaves.
Loss of water through the leaves is called transpiration.
On a
summer day, a single birch tree may transpire 700 to 900 gallons of
water. It is this enormous flow of water that causes a continuous flow
of sap from the roots to the topmost twigs.
In planting or transplanting a tree, and in building on a lot where you wish to preserve the trees, the gardener's
chief consideration must be to protect the root structure of the tree.
The big roots near the stem anchor the tree to the ground, while the
fine root hairs at the ends of the rootlets absorb the water from the
soil.
The stem or trunk of a tree has three parts: the bark,
the wood and the pith. The pith is the central part and around it is
the wood. Between wood and bark is the cambium, a thin layer that
produces new wood and bark. When the cambium ring is severed, as by a
wire cable, the tree is killed, and since the cambium protects against
insects and disease, anything driven into it can wound the tree
severely.
Outside of man himself, trees have countless enemies.
There
are 200,000 known kinds of insects that attack trees, in addition to
diseases such as blight, rust and rot, storms and droughts. Luckily,
birds help to keep caterpillars, borers
, beetles and other insects in check.
Paul Curran is CEO of Cuzcom Internet Publishing Group and webmaster at Trees-and-Bushes.com, providing access to their nursery supplier for a range of quality plants, trees, bushes, shrubs, seeds and garden products.Visit their trees section to find a great selection of trees for your garden