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This is a sample of the byway color in past seasons.
Below is a Panoramic View from the Observation
tower. It is the early fall time
before all the color has turned. It will take about 5+ minutes to load with a
56k modem but it should be worth it.
To control the picture, click mouse pointer on the picture. Hold left
button down and move the pointer to move the picture. HOW LEAVES CHANGE COLORA
green leaf is green because of the presence of a group of pigments known as
chlorophylls. When they are
abundant in the leaf’s cells, as they are during the growing season, the
chlorophylls’ green color dominates and masks out the colors of any other
pigments that may be present in the leaf. Thus
the leaves of summer are characteristically green. The chlorophylls have a vital function; they capture some of the sun’s energy and utilize it in the manufacture of the plant’s food – simple sugars which are produced from water and carbon dioxide. These sugars are the basis of the plant’s nourishment – the sole source of the carbohydrates needed for growth and development. In their food-manufacturing process, the chlorophylls themselves break down and thus are being continually “used up.” During the growing season, however, the plant replenishes the chlorophyll so that the supply remains high and the leaves stay green. But as autumn approaches, certain influences both inside and outside the plant cause the chlorophylls to be replaced at a slower rate than they are being used up. During this period, with the total supply of chlorophylls gradually dwindling, the “masking” effect slowly fades away. Then other pigments that have been present (along with the chlorophylls) in the cells all during the leaf’s life begin to show through. These are the carotenoids; they give us colorations of yellow, brown, orange, and the many hues in between. The
reds, the purples, and their blended combinations that decorate autumn foliage
come from another group of pigments in the cells called anthocyanins.
These pigments are not present in the leaf throughout the growing season
as are the carotenoids. They
develop in late summer in the sap of the cells of the leaf, and this development
is the result of complex interactions of many influences – both inside and
outside the plant. Their formation
depends on the breakdown of sugars in the presence of bright light as the level
of a certain chemical (phosphate) in the leaf is reduced.
But
in the fall, phosphate, along with the other chemicals and nutrients, moves out
of the leaf into the stem of the plant. When
this happens, the sugar-breakdown process changes, leading to the production of
anthocyanin pigments. The brighter
the light during this period, the greater the production of anthocyanins and the
more brilliant the resulting color display that we see.
When the days of autumn are bright and cool, and the nights chilly but
not freezing, the brightest colorations usually develop.
Anthocyanins temporarily color the edges of some of the very young leaves as they unfold from the buds in early spring. They also give the familiar color to such common fruits as cranberries, red apples, blueberries, cherries, strawberries, and plums. In our autumn forests, they show up vividly in the maples, oaks, sourwood, sweetgum, dogwood, tupelo, black gum, and persimmon. These same pigments often combine with the carotenoids’ colors to give us the deeper orange, fiery reds, and bronzes typical of many hardwood species. The
carotenoids occur, along with the chlorophyll pigments, in tiny structures –
called plastids – within the cells of the leaves.
Sometimes they are in such abundance in the leaf that they give a plant
yellow-green color, even during the summer.
But usually we become aware of their presence for the first time in
autumn, when the leaves begin to lose their chlorophyll. Carotenoids
are common in many living things, giving characteristic color to carrots, corn,
canaries, and daffodils, as well as egg yolks, rutabagas, buttercups, and
bananas. Their
brilliant yellows and oranges tint the leaves of such hardwood species as
hickories, ash, maple, yellow-poplar, aspen, birch, black cherry, sycamore,
cotton-wood, sassafras, and alder. FOR
A MORE DETAILED ILLUSTRATION ON AUTUMN COLOR VISIT THE How
Leaves Change COLOR website. Big Walker Lookout 8711 Stony Fork Road, Wytheville, Virginia 24382 276-663-4016
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