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  <title>Rich and Strange Aeons</title>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 21 Mar 2019 15:52:46 GMT</pubDate>
  <title>some tree stuff</title>
  <link>https://mindstalk.dreamwidth.org/516914.html</link>
  <description>Currently reading &lt;i&gt;The Secret Life of Trees&lt;/i&gt; by Colin Tudge, not to be confused with the more recent &lt;i&gt;The Hidden Life of Trees&lt;/i&gt; by a German forester.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What is a tree?  The obvious popular, and functional, definition is a tall plant on a stick, outgrowing competition in a race for sunlight.  The least interesting definition requires the stick to be made of wood[1], rather than herbal stems kept up by water pressure; I&apos;ll call that &quot;woody tree&quot;.  A more evolutionary definition of &quot;trees proper&quot; invokes secondary growth, and specifically the cambium, a sheath of cells around the trunk that generate wood on the inside and bark on the outside (xylem and phloem), contributing to growth outward as well as upward.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The tree lifestyle is one of the targets of convergent evolution, hit by Lepidodendron, tree ferns, some Carboniferous horsetails, various monocots.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The tree proper encompasses conifers (and their gymnosperm relatives, cycads and ginkgo) and most flowering (angiosperm) trees, which suggests their common ancestor was a tree, and also that the first flowering plant was a tree, despite the vast mass of angiosperms that have since shed all wood and tree-ness.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Flowering plants can be divided into primitive dicots, true dicots (eudicots), and monocots.  The big distinction is that monocot leaves grow from the base, rather than the tip or edge; grasses are monocots, and having their growth region below the ground means they can survive grazing, which is part of why they&apos;ve become so successful in the last 40 million years.  There are five groups of monocot &apos;trees&apos;, none of which have the cambium of trees proper, so the first monocot must have been herby, with subsequent re-inventions of the tree lifestyle. Some of those have a form of secondary growth but not the cambium.  Monocot trees include Joshua trees and palms.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;[1] Lignified cellulose.  Cellulose is floppy, having lots of lignin molecules in it makes for a rigid matrix that can stand up on its own.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://www.dreamwidth.org/tools/commentcount?user=mindstalk&amp;ditemid=516914&quot; width=&quot;30&quot; height=&quot;12&quot; alt=&quot;comment count unavailable&quot; style=&quot;vertical-align: middle;&quot;/&gt; comments</description>
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  <category>botany</category>
  <category>biology</category>
  <category>trees</category>
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