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Courtesy G.
Lumis
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Just as human beings have a protective outer layer all
over their bodies known as skin, so do trees have a protective outer layer
called bark. Damage to the bark can prove fatal to the tree. If someone
cut the bark, around a tree to the wood beneath the flow of food would be
disrupted and the tree will starve to death.
Many kinds of trees can be immediately recognized by their distinctive
bark. Variations in markings, colour and texture denote not only the type
of tree, but even the age of the tree within that particular species.
The bark of a young tree and that on young parts of a mature tree are
quite thin, but the bark of an older tree is thick and rough. For instance
the bark of the giant and ancient west-coast Douglas-fir tree, may be more
than a foot thick.
Every tree has two layers of bark, an inner layer and an outer layer. The
inner bark, through which food passes up and down he trunk and along the
branches, is soft and moist. The outer bark is hard and firm. The hardness
and thickness of the bark protects the tree from injury and from the
elements.
The older the tree, the thicker the bark grows. This is because each year
a layer of inner bark hardens and becomes part of the outer bark. In this
way the outer bark builds off, even though some of it will eventually fall
off the tree in the form of scales.
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