cambium

listen to the pronunciation of cambium
İngilizce - Türkçe
katmandoku
büyütkendoku
kambiyum
katman doku
vascular cambium
vasküler kambiyum
İngilizce - İngilizce
One of the humours formerly believed to nourish the bodily organs

The radical or innate is daily supplied by nourishment, which some call cambium, and make those secondary humours of ros and gluten to maintain it .

A layer of cells between the xylem and the phloem that is responsible for the secondary growth of roots and stems

During winter we perceive no change in the cells of the cambium layer, which are filled with nutritive matter . . .

{i} plant tissue which causes stems and roots to increase in girth (Botany)
Layer of cells in the stem which give rise to the water and food carrying tissues, and also in cork cambium, cork
The layer of cells between the inner bark and wood of a tree where cell division takes place
the inner layer of the periosteum formative one-cell-thick layer of tissue between xylem and phloem in most vascular plants that is responsible for secondary growth
layer a layer just inside the bark of a tree where
In plants, a layer of actively dividing cells between xylem (fluid-conducting) and phloem (food-conducting) tissues that is responsible for the secondary growth of stems and roots, resulting in an increase in thickness. A cambium may also form within callus tissues. See also bark, wood
In wood anatomy, the 1-cell-thick layer of tissue between the bark and wood that repeatedly subdivides to form new wood and bark cells
The layer of cells between the inner bark and wood of a tree This is where growth takes place
Thin layer of tissue beneath the bark of gymnosperms and dicots It is from the cambium that new bark originates [16]
A single layer of cells between the woody part of the tree and the bark Division of these cells result in diameter growth of the tree through formation of wood cells (xylem) and inner bark (phloem)
A lateral meristem in a shoot
a single layer of cells between the woody part of the tree and the bark Division of these cells results in diameter growth of the tree through formation of wood cells (xylem) and inner bark (phloem)
A thin layer of specialized cells within a tree's trunk that divide to produce new inner bark cells to the outside and new sapwood cells to the inside The narrow band of cells that is responsible for the tree's growth in circumference
The growth of new wood takes place in the cambium, which is very soft
A narrow layer of cell tissue growing between the bark and the wood of woody plants In live wood, the cambium is green and moist
Layer of living cells between the wood and the innermost bark of a tree Each growing season the cambium adds a new layer of cells (by cell division) on the wood already formed, as well as a layer of inner bark on the cambium's outer face Division of these cells results in diameter growth of the tree through formation of wood cells (xylem) and inner bark (phloem)
A thin formative layer between the xylem and phloem of most vascular plants that gives rise to new cells and is responsible for secondary growth
The layer of cells between the innerbark and wood of a tree (where growth takes place)
A thin formative layer between the woody element of a plant and the complex tissue containing tubes for translocation of nutrients and water
the inner layer of the periosteum
A series of formative cells lying outside of the wood proper and inside of the inner bark
a layer of dividing plant cells which add during each growing season a layer of woody material (largely xylem) on their inner side toward the center of the stem or root and a layer of bark (phloem and associated tissues) on the outer side (Benson 1967)
A thin layer of tissue between the bark and the wood in a tree which repeatedly subdivides to form a new wood and bark cells
The one-cell thick layer of tissue between the bark and the wood in a tree It repeatedly subdivides to form new wood and bark cells
layer of tissue one to several cells thick found between the bark and the wood; divides to form new wood and bark
a single layer of cells in the tree’s trunk that produces the new wood and bark
layer which forms across and between primary bundles where each year cells in this layer divide and grow As the cambium divides, wood and bark cells form
tissue of the cells what are able to divide and make growth in thickness
A fancied nutritive juice, formerly supposed to originate in the blood, to repair losses of the system, and to promote its increase
formative one-cell-thick layer of tissue between xylem and phloem in most vascular plants that is responsible for secondary growth
cambiums
plural of cambium
cork cambium
A lateral ring of meristematic tissue found in woody seed plants, producing cork on the outside of the ring and parenchyma on the inside of the ring. Also called phellogen
fascicular cambium
Cambium that develops within the vascular bundle
vascular cambium
A lateral meristem that produces secondary xylem to the inside and secondary phloem to the outside
cambium