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xylem vessels

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moo | 20:22 Tue 12th Oct 2004 | Animals & Nature
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how are xylem vessels dead? surely they were alive once? i asked my science teacher who replied "because they are" which wasn't quite a good enough explaination... how did dead cells just appear from nowhere???? confused!!
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Think of a living treetrunk not as a solid thing, but as a hollow cylinder of growing plant material just under the bark. This living part grows in two directions. The outside layer grows outwards, and becomes the bark -- which is dead. The inside layer grows xylem vessels on its inside. As these build up on the inside, they push the living layer outwards. When the living layer has moved away, they die, and are left as non-living, but of course functional water transport tubes, or as we usually call it, wood. The growing layer is called the cambium. The reason why many trees have fissured bark is because it is always having to expand. All this is why completely hollow trees can live perfectly well -- some for hundreds of years -- they only need a layer of xylem under the bark, not the whole tree trunk.
You might like to print this page and give New Foresters excellent answer to your scientifically challenged science teacher. Off topic I know but what a poor attitude! My partner is a science teacher and would never answer in such a way. If he doesn't know the answer he either looks it up or suggests to the pupil where he might find the answer. Good teachers admit they don't have all the answers!

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