“…The CW can undergo several types of deformation that can be measured either in situ (ideally in living plant tissues) or in simplified models, most frequently using onion epidermis peels clamped in a custom-made mechanical testing device (Cosgrove, 1989 ; 2011 ; Durachko & Cosgrove, 2009 ; Durachko et al, 2017 ; Wang et al, 2020 ; Zhang & Cosgrove, 2017 ; Zhang et al, 2019a ). In some cases, slightly more complex systems such as de-frosted Arabidopsis petioles (Park & Cosgrove, 2012a ; Xin et al, 2020 ), cucumber and Arabidopsis hypocotyls (Boron et al, 2015 ; Cosgrove, 1989 ; Marga et al, 2005 ; Park & Cosgrove, 2012b ) or wheat coleoptiles (Hepler & Cosgrove, 2019 ) have been used. The advantage of using onion epidermal peels is that the mechanical properties of isolated CW fragments can be measured, largely neglecting the contribution of neighbouring cells, cell size or shape that might possibly influence the results when using indentation-based (AFM) measurements (Cosgrove, 2018b and references therein).…”