
Bark of a Pine tree in Tecpan, Guatemala.
'Bark' is the outermost layer of
stems and
roots of
woody plants such as
trees. It overlays the
wood and consists of three layers, the
cork, the
phloem, and the
vascular cambium.
Botanic description
In young stems of woody plants like trees and
shrubs and some
perennial vines, the bark is made up of these
tissues arranged from the outside surface to the inside:
★ 'Cork' - an external, secondary tissue impermeable to water and gases.
★ 'Cork cambium' - A layer of
cells , normally one or two cell layers thick that is in a persistent
meristematic state that produces cork.
★ 'Phelloderm' - (not always present) A layer of cells formed in some plants from the inner cells of the cork cambium (Cork is produced from the outer layer).
★ 'Cortex' - The primary tissue of
stems and roots. In stems the cortex is between the epidermis layer and the phloem, in roots the inner layer is not phloem but the
pericycle.
★ 'Phloem' -
nutrient conducting tissue composed of sieve tube or sieve cells mixed with
parenchyma and fibers.
In old stems the epidermal layer, cortex, and primary phloem become separated from the inner tissues by thicker formations of cork. Due to the thickening cork layer these cells die because they do not receive water and nutrients. This dead layer is the rough corky bark that forms around tree trunks and other stems. In smaller stems and on typically non woody plants, sometimes a secondary covering forms called the
periderm, which is made up of cork cambian, cork and phelloderm. It replaces the dermal layer and acts as a covering much like the corky bark, it too is made up of mostly dead tissue. The skin on the potato is a periderm.
Definitions of the term can vary. In another usage, bark consists of the dead and protective tissue found on the outside of a woody stem, and does not include the vascular tissue.
The
vascular cambium is the only part of a woody stem where
cell division occurs. It contains undifferentiated cells that divide rapidly to produce secondary
xylem to the inside and secondary
phloem to the outside.
Along with the
xylem, the phloem is one of the two tissues inside a plant that are involved with fluid transport. The phloem transports organic molecules (particularly
sugars) to wherever they are needed.
Uses
Cork, sometimes confused with bark in colloquial speech, is the outermost layer of a woody stem, derived from the
cork cambium. It serves as protection against damage,
parasites and
diseases, as well as dehydration and extreme temperatures. Cork can contain
antiseptics like
tannins. Some cork is substantially thicker, providing further insulation and giving the bark a characteristic structure, in some cases thick enough to be harvestable as
cork product without killing the tree.
The bark of some trees is edible.
Among the commercial products made from bark are
cork,
cinnamon,
quinine (from the bark of
Cinchona) and
aspirin (from the bark of
willow trees). The bark of some trees notably oak (''Quercus robur'') is a source of tannic acid, which is used in
tanning.
Gallery
See also
★
Bark painting
★
Bark beetle
★
Trunk (botany)