-Advertisement-
  About AE   About NHM   Contact Us   Terms of Use   Copyright Info   Privacy Policy   Advertising Policies   Site Map
   
Custom Search of AE Site
spacer spacer

The Falling Leaves

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence 


Ithaca, N.Y (10/4/97)-  As Autumn comes, so too do discussions of  the hows and whys of the changing colors of the leaves. One area open to debate is which factors influence the relative brilliance of the foliage from one year to the next. 

"Science agrees on the mechanism of fall color, but there is debate as to what precedes it," said Peter J. Davies, Cornell University professor of plant physiology.  "Is it a wet summer or a dry summer that increases the brilliance?  Without a doubt, cool nights and bright days contribute quite a bit to fall color."

The basics are not in dispute. The fall colors come from two main sources: pigments, such as yellow and orange carotenoids, and red anthocyanins. Yellow and orange carotenoids are present in the leaves all the time but are masked by the green chlorophyll.  As the leaves become senescent (or age) at the end of the season, the green chlorophyll in certain tree species degrades, allowing the oranges and yellows of the carotenoids to show through. 

During the warm days of fall, the leaves can still make sugars by photosynthesis -- provided the leaves still possess chlorophyll, explained Davies.  When the night temperatures fall, the transport of the sugars from the leaves is slowed and these sugars are converted into the red anthocyanins.  This process also is enhanced if the plants are under stress, he said.

The weather at the time of fall color has the most influence. The most impressive colors will develop under warm sunny days with cool (but not freezing) nights.  Cool, rainy days cause the leaves to fall without developing much color, as the rain and wind knock the leaves off more rapidly, he explained:

"If you look at trees at the edge of a woodland area, the trees exposed to sun are always more colored than those that are more shaded.  There are many opinions on the role of weather during the preceding summer.  I think most are anecdotal and I don't know if anyone has done a long-term study on the phenomenon," he added. Even fertilizing a tree late in the season will decrease the fall color of the leaves, he said.

"It is my opinion that the more the tree is under (physiological) stress, the more color will be developed," Davies said.  "Thus a dry summer (leading to water stress or drought stress) will probably give more color the following fall than a moist, rainy one."


 
Related information on the Internet
AE: Time to Leave
AE: The Forest...and the Trees
 
 

Science Updates Index

What's News Index

Feedback


 
Today's Health and
BioScience News
Science Update Archives Factoids Newsmaker Interviews
Archive

 
Custom Search on the AE Site

 

-Advertisement-