Trees are made up of three main components: the
roots, the leaves and the woody structure that connects them. The
function of the roots is to bring the water and minerals to the rest of
the tree. The leaves also serve to feed the tree. They absorb carbon
dioxide from the air and use sunlight to combine this gas with the
moisture brought up from the roots, making the simple sugars which feed
the tree giving off oxygen as a byproduct.
That is the true magic
of trees; they feed off of a toxic gas and provide clean oxygen in
return. They are truly the earths air filter. According to David Nowak
of the USDA Forest Service a persons oxygen needs could be supplied by
two trees. To make up for the carbon dioxide created by the average
household with a single car would take about 1/6th of an acre of trees
(so start planting).
The woody structure, including the trunk,
branches and twigs hold the trees leaves in position to receive the
life-giving sunlight and carbon dioxide; they also act as a means of
carrying the raw materials and nutrients back and forth between the
roots and the leaves. The moisture taken up by the roots is pulled up
by a process of capillary attraction and the osmotic action induced by
the evaporation of water from the leaves. This loss of water through
the leaves is called transpiration.
On a warm summer day, a
single birch tree may transpire as much as 900 gallons of water. This
enormous flow of water causes a continuous flow of tree sap from the
roots of the tree to the uppermost leaves.
When moving a tree or
working around an existing tree that you wish to preserve, the highest
priority is to protect the root structure of the tree itself. The
larger roots at the trunk anchor the tree to the ground and stabilize
it, while the small root-hairs at the ends of the rootlets absorb the
water from the ground.
The trunk of a tree is made up of the
bark, the wood and the pith. The pith is the middle section surrounded
by the wood. Between the wood and exterior bark is a thin layer that
creates new wood on the inside and bark on the outside. This layer is
known as the cambium layer. When the cambium ring is severed the tree
is killed, such as when a fence wire is wrapped around a tree and wears
through the bark. Damage to the cambium layer also makes a tree
vulnerable to insects and disease, so anything driven into it can wound
a tree severely.
Besides man himself, trees have many natural
enemies. There are more than 200,000 known insects that attack trees.
Diseases, such as blight, rust, and rot, just to name a few can cause
tremendous amounts of damage to trees or groupings of trees. High
winds, ice storms and droughts can also create a great deal of havoc
with trees. Fortunately, trees have several thing going for them. They
are extremely resilient and can survive even serious damage, storms and
droughts are not terribly common and birds ally themselves with tree to
keep most of the insects in check.