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Thursday, October 24, 2019

Changing Leaves

Fall is in full swing. The sun keeps the air warm, but it's chilly in the shade. Honking geese fly overhead and crickets chirp throughout the lengthening nights. Dried leaves swirls about in the breeze, while those still in the trees for a riot of color. What is going on inside the tree that causes the color change?
Trees are getting ready for a long winter's nap. Like animals going into hibernation, everything is slowing down. Trees have been gorging themselves on sunlight all summer, and now their metabolism is slowing down. The chlorophyll is breaking down and water uptake is stopping. Chlorophyll absorbs all wavelengths of light except green, which is reflected back to us. Without chlorophyll, we see other chemicals in the leaf.
A yellow sugar maple catches the late morning sun

The yellow leaf of a sugar maple

Xanthophyll colors the leaves of aspens, birches, and beeches a bright yellow. It's also found in corn.  Red and purple in red maples and scarlet oaks comes from anthocyanin, which is produced when the chlorophyll stops and the leaf metabolizes extra sugars. Carotene, the same as what you find in a carrot, gives trees like sugar maple and sassafras their orange leaves. Orange can also come from a leaf that is showing both xanthophyll and anthocyanin. Brown, such as in oaks, comes from tannins. Carotene and Xanthophyll are present all year in the leaves, but are overshadowed by chlorophyll.
Another sugar maple, this one decked out in red
This red sugar maple leaf fell of a Canadian flag
The brilliance of each color, as well as the amount of colors relative to each other, are dependent on the weather. If fall is sunny and dry, trees will produce more anthocyanin. Trees will be a more brilliant red. Other years, trees won't produce as much or even none at all and nearly all leaves will change to yellow.
But of course, each tree is an individual so it may change well before its neighbor or have different or more vibrant colors, even among the same species. I've seen red maples that look like traffic lights with red, yellow, and green leaves on the same tree. I've even seen multi-colored leaves.
Brown oak leaf, rich in tannin
Yet another sugar maple, this time in orange

Get out there and enjoy some biochemistry in action before it's too late! The leaves have been great this year, peaking in my area this week and next. Up north you may be past peak, and down south it's on its way! This week's information comes from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry and Montana Natural History Center.
Yellow and brown hickories and oaks basking in late
afternoon sunshine

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