Parts of the tree Grade 8.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EQ: How do I describe the function of the stems and roots?
Advertisements

Wood Anatomy of Tree Rings. Tree growth begins with photosynthesis to produce new wood when the growing season begins.
Tree Cookies! They're round. They're full of fiber. But unless you're a termite, you can't eat tree cookies! Based on:
Materials used for the roof structure and joinery components.
Stems: STRUCTURE & FUNCTION
Timber Grows on Trees!  Stores carbon  Sustainable Planting to meet demand Recyclable  Selection of product Species of Timber Type of Processing Seasoning.
Timber - the Material Timber grows on Trees Properties of Timber Grading sawn timber Durability of timber Specifying and handling timber Application of.
1 Review What are three important functions of stems Explain How does the arrangement of vascular bundles in monocot stems differ from dicot stems Apply.
How a Tree Grows.
Wood Work Yeh Yeh Yeh.
Tree Growth and Wood Formation
If you were to describe a tree to someone who had never seen one before, what would you say?
13B-3 Roots Not always underground Anchor the plant
Characteristics of Seed Plants
Tree Structures and Functions
Characteristics of the Plant Kingdom 1.Plants can make their own food; they are autotrophs you know! 2. Plants have many cells with walls; we call them.
General Woodworking Units 2 & 3 Wood Properties Mr. Nelson Darien High School.
Trees! Giants Among Plants. What is it about plants that makes them so special? What is it about plants that makes them so special? How are trees different.
Lesson Overview Lesson OverviewStems THINK ABOUT IT While choosing items at a salad bar, you add some sliced water chestnuts, bamboo shoots, asparagus,
Exploring Plants Plant Structure & Function. Tissues  Vascular tissue form strands that conduct water, minerals, & nutrients through a plant  Dermal.
Stem Study Guide Answers
Parts of a Vascular Plant
Plant Structures Stems Horticulture I Specialized Tissues in Plants Plants are as successful if not more successful than animals Plants are as successful.
End Show Slide 1 of 36 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology.
Plant Anatomy Quiz 12B. Two important characteristics of plant cells cell walls plastids.
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1 Created by Ms. Holli Bowman FORS 7730 Fall 2001 Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office July 2002.
Wood.
Tree Rings Can Tell You Things About Climate Change.
Tree Growth Dendrology - study of trees Dendrochronology - study of tree rings.
Dendrology: Tree Parts and Functions
Trees and Forests.
Tree Cookies! They're round. They're full of fiber. But unless you're a termite, you can't eat tree cookies! Based on:
Lesson Overview 23.3 Stems. Lesson Overview Lesson OverviewStems THINK ABOUT IT While choosing items at a salad bar, you add some sliced water chestnuts,
Parts of Tree.
Tree Basics Basic Description: Woody plants with single stems. Consist of toots, trunk and crown.
Tree Cookies! They're round. They're full of fiber. But unless you're a termite, you can't eat tree cookies! Based on:
Section 3.  Stems produce leaves, branches, and flowers.  stems hold leaves up to the sun.  And stems transport substances throughout the plant.
Stems C9L3P4 Plant Organs. The part of a plant that connects its roots to its leaves is the stem. Stems support branches and leaves, and their vascular.
BIOLOGY.
Plant Structures Roots, Stems, and Leaves
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1
Lecture #19 Structure of Wood.
Roots, Stems, Leaves Chapter 4 Section 4 #47A.
Bellringer The flower on the left is a ___________ and the flower on the right is a ______________.
Chapter 22 Plant Structure and Function: Stems
Forestry and Forest Products
Parts of a tree.
Lesson Overview 23.3 Stems.
Bellwork: What is the difference between primary and secondary growth of stems? How are they related? Why does this result in certain plants being able.
Lesson Overview 23.3 Stems.
Plant Science Terms and Anatomy
Stems.
Forestry Lesson 1 Tree Parts.
Forestry and Forest Products
Tree Structure.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Plant Anatomy Quiz 12B.
Forestry Lesson 1 Tree Parts.
BIOLOGY.
Applied Biology Plant Review.
Wood Name 5 objects that are made out of wood. Is the same TYPE of wood used in all of these objects? If not, how does the wood differ? What types of trees.
Trees & Forests – What is a tree?
Forestry-Parts of the TREE
Stems Section 12.3.
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1
Chapter 18 Plants have two types of growth, usually enabling lifelong increases in length and thickness.
Secondary Growth.
Stems transports water and dissolved substances throughout the plant body supports the branches, leaves, and flowers store water and carbohydrates may.
Primary Growth and Secondary Growth
Into the Wood(s): What is wood, anyways?.
Presentation transcript:

Parts of the tree Grade 8

Cross section of the tree trunk

Parts of the tree The tree trunk consist of eight parts .They are: Sapwood Heartwood Cambium Pith Annual rings Medullary Ray Bark Inner Bark

Label diagram

1. Sapwood Sapwood is the outer part of the tree responsible for receiving the water and minerals from the roots and conducting them around the tree to the leaves as well as for food storage. It is located between the heartwood and the cambium.

Location of the sapwood

2. Heartwood Heartwood is the non-active part of the tree-usually darker in colour than sapwood- and provides the tree with the rigidity often necessary to support the crown. The most durable wood for timber is from this part of the tree. It is located between the pith and the sapwood.

Location of the heartwood

3. Medullary Rays A ray consist of a strip of wood cells that allow sap to move transversely through the wood and provide for storage of surplus food and its movement when required . They may appear to radiate from the pith to the inner bark ,hence the name medullary ray is often used.

Location of the medullary rays

4. Inner bark / bast The inner bark distributes the food substances provided by the leaves through the whole of the tree. After one growing season it will become inactive as a mean of conducting food ; it takes on a new role as the outer bark. It is located between the cambium and the outer bark.

Location of the inner bark / bast

5. Bark The bark makes up the outer sheath of the whole tree. It serves to protect the inner parts of the tree from: Fungal attack , Mechanical abrasion by animals and other agents , Extreme temperatures and Insect attack.

Location of the bark

6. Pith The pith is the center of the tree. The pith is the result of the tree’s earliest growth –a sapling –wood immediately surrounding it is called ‘juvenile wood’, which is not very desirable as timber.

Location of the pith

7. Cambium Cambium is the sleeves of cells located between the sapwood and the inner bark which covers the whole of the tree-that is its trunk, branches and twigs. These cells are responsible for growth of the tree both its girth[distance around the trunk] and height. As the cells formed during the growing season they become sub-divided in such a way that new cells are added to both the sapwood and the inner bark.

Location of the cambium

8. Annual rings This implies that the rings of wood cells ,which appear as bands ,are reproduced each year and by counting the number of rings we know how old the tree was when it was cut down.

Location of the Annual Rings

classwork 1. Label the cross section of the tree trunk

classwork 2. Give function of each part identified