periderms
Periderm is a protective tissue that replaces the epidermis in many plants undergoing secondary growth. It consists of cork cambium (phellogen), cork (phellem), and phelloderm. The cork cambium is a meristem that forms when a ring of cells in the cortex or pericycle becomes meristematic. It divides outward to produce cork cells and inward to produce phelloderm. Cork cells become suberized, die as they mature, forming a tough, water-impermeable layer. Phelloderm remains living and may be parenchymatous. Together these layers constitute the periderm and, along with underlying secondary phloem, constitute the bark.
Periderm replaces the epidermis in regions of secondary growth and serves to protect the inner tissues, limit
Origin and variation: Cork cambium may arise from residual cortical cells, the endodermis, or the pericycle,