2023
DOI: 10.1101/2023.03.31.535027
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Rhytidome- and cork-type barks of holm oak, cork oak and their hybrids highlight processes leading to cork formation

Abstract: The periderm is basic for land plants due to its protective role during radial growth, which is achieved by the polymers deposited in the cell walls. In most trees, like holm oak, the periderm is frequently replaced by subsequent internal periderms yielding a heterogeneous outer bark made of a mixture of periderms and phloem tissues, known as rhytidome. Exceptionally, cork oak forms a persistent or long-lived periderm which results in a homogeneous outer bark of thick phellem cell layers known as cork. Here we… Show more

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