Callus and Woundwood - Callus is a tissue that is
meristematic. That means it has the capacity to divide and differentiate and
to form sprouts, roots, leaves, buds. Meristematic – the capacity, the
capacity, the capacity. With callus, the cells are all round, they have very
little lignin, they all look the same. As they are released, the
meristematic cells in the wood that are surrounded by the apoplast, now have
an opportunity, to divide and they divide and become nice round cells. They
are meristematic. Woundwood doesn’t happen immediately. See many people do
not understand this term. Dr Shigo did not do this.
This was the work of Ernest Kuster
in 1903. As cells are released by wounds, pruning, bashing into the
tree, the meristematic parenchyma cells that are trapped and held in place by
the apoplast now have an opportunity (i.e., those that survive after the
wound and are still able to divide and differentiate) to divide and as they
divide they become nice round cells. You see the wound has released
pressure. It has released these meristematic living cells in wood and bark.
The cells then have very little lignin and they spent all of their money or
all of their energy having more kids – more cells. However, as the cells
divide and divide and divide and have division parties – they all get
together and we are all going to divide, the pressure begins to come back.
Some cells say, its my turn to divide, no its my turn to divide, so one says
if I can’t divide and become more big round cells I might as well just become
a vessel, a fiber or maybe I’ll become a parenchyma cell and just maintain my
living content. We do not know how it all goes. We do not know, we do not
know, we do not know. But we do know there comes a time when division begins
to go in a way we just described. Then these cells begin to loose their
meristematic ability – some of them, not all of them. And they begin to cash
in if you wish, use if you wish, utilize (we do not know) some of their
energy to form lignin. Lignin is extremely expensive material. And then
they become, in time, not callus but woundwood. People find it very
difficult to understand this. People too often admit in writing that they do
not understand these processes by misusing the words callus and woundwood.
They say we always used that word, which shows they are not that bright, and
they want to maintain that word and use it. See callus does not usually
close large wounds. Callus may close a very small wound, but most of the
time its woundwood, its wood. So as the arrangement of the cells begins to
come back to its normal state then we go to wood. So we start with normal
wood and it is wounded, released, some still alive. Those that are still
alive will then produce callus. As the callus, as the pressure returns, some
of the cells begin to become woundwood.
Or if you want to think of it this way, maybe you will
understand it better this way. Here we have in the beginning, all are happy
in their orderly arrangement. Then comes the wound. Those that can survive
this injury then begin to reproduce or have new cells – this is callus. Lets
say that is 100. And then some begin to leave the group and become as they
were before and then its 99-1. Then its 90-10. Then 80-20. Then 70-30.
Then 50-50. Then 40-60. Now we are going toward woundwood. Because you see
callus does not suddenly become woundwood, it takes time. That is why these
two words are so difficult to understand. Please let us help you. Please
make certain you use the correct words. If you don’t use the correct words
then we don’t know what you are talking about. Then we have gibberish,
confusion and then an argument. Please use the correct words. Think, think,
think.
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