Thank you Raju ji... good general explanation but
it did not answer my question...

Because when I look at the picture number 2 ... I can distinctly make
out that someone took a machete or a sharp long heavy knife and sliced
a piece of the bark off, there is beveled edge on 3 sides and the
fourth is at the bottom where the knife's cutting edge stopped and
took the piece of the bark off....

this is the same ...MACRO condition of course... and not
sterile..compare to MICRO and STERILE procedure in plastic surgery
where we slice off a section of full thickness epidermis with a little
bit of fascia for grafting... same type of bevel on edges and same
sharp 4th edge where the knife stopped...

THIS DID NOT PEEL OFF... it was deliberately cut... why...???   ....
is the question...

I had white birch on my property and we used to peel off the thin bark
when it started peeling by itself, we would coax it off..
delicately... bhoj patra in India... to bring to relatives ...that's
peeling off in lateral strips, parallel to the ground....
where as my pine trees would flake off rectangular bark pieces in the
verticals... we used them  for mulch and in making growing medium for
orchids....

PLEASE SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT IS THE SCIENTIFIC REASON FOR CUTTING ?
SLICING A PIECE OF BARK OFF A TREE LIKE THAT SEEN IN FIGURE 2 here...

IF THIS IS SCIENTIFIC PROCESS I WANT TO KNOW WHY WHAT WHEN and HOW CAN
IT DAMAGE THE TRE or NOT...

THANKS
USHA DI

===================




On Oct 24, 6:30 am, raju <[email protected]> wrote:
> Dear Ushadiji,
> Thank you so much,
> Like other morphological characters, trees could also be identified by
> their bark. If you touch the bark of the tree and try to feel the
> texture of the bark, you can experience its texture. It could be
> uniform, spiny, flaky, smooth or ridged. This method could be useful
> in case of trees that have reached their age of maturity. The colour
> of the bark can also be a parameter in identifying trees. In that
> case, you need to peel off a strip of bark. For instance, if you try
> to peel the bark of this sp, it breaks down into small strips in the
> horizontal direction and exposes its pinkish-white layers underneath.
> You will experience how different kinds of bark peel off in different
> shaped strips and different colour. Some tree trunks are unique in
> their appearance, thus, they can be identified easily.
>
> But, I hardly ever try this. In this case I was lucky to get a fallen
> stem due to heavy storm in the day before my field work.
>
> Regards,
>
> Raju
>
> On Oct 24, 3:02 am, Ushadi micromini <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > very nice...
> > question...
> > why do people scrape off/slice off bark... as in your 2nd pic above ??
> > what is scientific reason?
> > usha di
> > =============
>
> > On Oct 23, 10:59 pm, raju das <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Dear Friends,
>
> > > *Engelhardtia* *spicata*  Lechen ex Blume
>
> > > Syn Name: *Engelhardtia* *aceriflora* (Reinw.)
> > > Blume<http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-2789148>
>
> > > *Gyrocarpus* *pendulus*
> > > Blanco<http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-2837019>
>
> > > Family: Juglandaceae
>
> > > Photographed at Assam (6 July, 2010)
> > > --
> > > *Raju Das
> > > Nature's Foster*
>
> > >  Engelhardita 1.jpg
> > > 120KViewDownload
>
> > >  Engelhardita 1 (stem).jpg
> > > 100KViewDownload
>
> > >  Engelhardita 2 (leaves).jpg
> > > 85KViewDownload
>
> > >  Engelhardita 3 (flower bud).jpg
> > > 166KViewDownload
>
> > >  Englehardtia 4 (full bloom).jpg
> > > 68KViewDownload
>
> > >  Englehardtia 4 (fruit).jpg
> > > 48KViewDownload- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

Reply via email to