The Morning Call

Leaves show their true colors in the fall

Autumn’s visual feast is a return to normal for trees

- By Jessica Damiano Jessica Damiano writes regular gardening columns for The Associated Press. She publishes the award-winning Weekly Dirt Newsletter.

The landscape across much of the country has changed from green to vibrant shades of yellow, orange, red and even purple. But is this dramatic annual kaleidosco­pe the leaves’ transforma­tion into something new? Not exactly.

The visual feast we see in autumn is actually a return to normal for the leaves. The real magic occurs in spring, when trees and shrubs begin using sunlight to produce the green pigment chlorophyl­l and photosynth­esize it into food to sustain themselves during the growing season. When that happens, the plants’ naturally colorful leaves take on the green hue we associate with them.

When summer gives way to fall, temperatur­es drop, days shorten and the amount and intensity of sunlight decreases. As a result, the chlorophyl­l within leaves breaks down, essentiall­y draining them of the green substance that had been masking their true colors.

Some years are better than others for leaf peeping.

During years when overnight temperatur­es are warmer than usual, the color transforma­tion is typically delayed. Drought, too, can play a role, muting the intensity of the annual show. And an early freeze can put the brakes on the spectacle altogether.

Different trees produce different pigments. Anthocyani­ns, for example, are present in purple and red leaves, like those of dogwoods, oaks and some maple species. They’re also responsibl­e for the color of fruits like apples, strawberri­es, blueberrie­s and plums, as well as red and purple flower petals.

Carotenoid­s, the same pigments present in carrots, are responsibl­e for yellow, orange and brown foliage, like that of beech, birch and sycamore trees. They also give corn, bananas and flowers like daffodils their color.

The most vibrant colors are produced during years with warm, rainy springs, “Goldilocks” summers (not too hot; not too cold) and dry, cool autumn days.

Sometimes, anomalies occur, like when leaves appear brighter on one side of a tree than the other. That’s usually due to difference­s in sunlight exposure.

But when one side of a tree has vibrantly colored leaves and the other side remains green, damage or disease could be to blame. Girdled roots, sometimes found on sidewalk trees and others growing in cramped conditions, can disrupt the even distributi­on of nutrients to all sides, as can a split trunk.

As the season progresses, and trees approach dormancy, hormonal changes within them spur a process called “abscission,” the growth of cells at the points where branches connect to leaves. After the color transition is complete, that connection gradually weakens until it just lets go.

 ?? ?? The striking scarlet foliage of a Japanese maple is on display Nov. 5 on Long Island, New York.
The striking scarlet foliage of a Japanese maple is on display Nov. 5 on Long Island, New York.

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