cork oak
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production of cork
- In cork
…of oak tree called the cork oak (species Quercus suber) that is native to the Mediterranean region. Cork consists of the irregularly shaped, thin-walled, wax-coated cells that make up the peeling bark of the birch and many other trees, but, in the restricted commercial sense of the word, only the…
Read More - In oak: Major species and uses
…from the bark of the cork oak (Q. suber), and the tannin-rich kermes oak (Q. coccifera) is the host of the kermes insect, once harvested for a dye contained in its body fluids.
Read More - In Fagales: Economic and ecological importance
suber (cork oak), native to and cultivated in the Mediterranean region; however, other species also produce cork. The bark is first stripped from the trees when they are about 20 years old, although the first quality cork is not produced for another 8 to 10 years.…
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tree bark
- In tree: Tree bark
…the commercial cork of the cork oak (Quercus suber) and the rugged, fissured outer coat of many other oaks; the flaking, patchy-coloured barks of sycamores (Platanus) and the lacebark pine (Pinus bungeana); and the rough shinglelike outer covering of shagbark hickory (Carya ovata).
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