Cypress - Tupelo Swamp North Louisiana BW
by Scott Pellegrin
Title
Cypress - Tupelo Swamp North Louisiana BW
Artist
Scott Pellegrin
Medium
Photograph
Description
This can be cropped to standard sizes such as 5x7, 8x10 and 11x14. Feel free to email with questions/comments. Thank you for looking.
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Both cypress and tupelo trees have adapted to the challenge of this waterlogged environment in many ways. The similarity of their solutions shows convergent evolution. Both cypress and tupelo trees, for example, have swollen bases, which may help in aeration of the trunk tissue, and add stability to the tree's uncertain footing in the muddy soil. Cypress "knees" may also help keep the cypress tree upright, providing a broad and heavy counterweight at the base of the tree. The tissue structure of the wood inside the cypress knees suggests that it might have an additional function. Up to 60% of the stem and root tissue is aerenchyma, tissue with a lot of air spaces for gas exchange. Up to 60% of the body of the plant can consist of pore spaces. Tupelo trees may have one or two knees, but cypress trees can have many, and they can grow up to 10-12 feet high. These knees are only produced if the tree grows underwater. To help the roots maintain normal respiration, Cypress trees transport oxygen down to the roots, and cypress and tupelo may discharge oxygen out of the root and into the soil, to create a thin boundary layer of oxygenated soil around the roots.
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Uploaded
April 9th, 2017
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Viewed 421 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/19/2024 at 3:02 AM
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Comments (6)
Calvin Boyer
In addition to the banner, I am adding this more permanent recognition of its FEATURE on the homepage of A TREE OR TREES IN BLACK AND WHITE. I try mightily to feature only images that would be at home in a juried competition. No doubt that this image fits that bill. CONGRATULATIONS! And consider adding your image to DISCUSSIONS "Please post your featured photograph here" for greater, long-lasting visibility.
Allan Van Gasbeck
Congratulations! Your outstanding artwork has been chosen as a FEATURE in the “The Gray Scale Outdoors” group on Fine Art America — You are invited to post your featured image to the featured image discussion thread as a permanent place to continue to get exposure even after the image is no longer on the Home Page.