In 2008, a study proposed that the maximum height for a Douglas fir -- one of the world's tallest trees -- is about 453 feet (138 meters) [source: Kinver]. But why is there a limit? Trees are supposed to be nature's skyscrapers, impossible to hem in. This cap exists because trees can only pull water so far up their trunks.The transporters in question are pitted dead cells, called tracheids, that move water from one cell to the next. The diameter of these all-important pits shrinks as you ascend into a tree's upper reaches, complicating water transport. Eventually the flow of water reaching the leaves and branches near the top dwindles off or stops, and the struggling sections experience "drought stress." They become dehydrated and die, establishing a de facto maximum height for that treeẢnh girl xinh hàn quốc Ảnh Girl Xinh hàn quốc,Girl xinh, Gái xinh Trung Quốc - Đài Loan - Hồng Kông, Ảnh Girl xinh, Girl dễ thương, Girl xinh đẹp, Girl Hot, Girl Cute, Girl Vip.Anh girl xinh trung quoc, anh girl trung quoc, gai xinh trung quoc, girl xinh han quoc, anh girl xinh, anh girl xinh nhat ban, girl han xinh, anh gai xinh han quoc
Thứ Năm, 6 tháng 9, 2012
nature
In 2008, a study proposed that the maximum height for a Douglas fir -- one of the world's tallest trees -- is about 453 feet (138 meters) [source: Kinver]. But why is there a limit? Trees are supposed to be nature's skyscrapers, impossible to hem in. This cap exists because trees can only pull water so far up their trunks.The transporters in question are pitted dead cells, called tracheids, that move water from one cell to the next. The diameter of these all-important pits shrinks as you ascend into a tree's upper reaches, complicating water transport. Eventually the flow of water reaching the leaves and branches near the top dwindles off or stops, and the struggling sections experience "drought stress." They become dehydrated and die, establishing a de facto maximum height for that tree
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