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MONDAY OCTOBER 29 - AUTUMN REDS AND PURPLES
Each fall, we enjoy the scenery of changing foliage as summer is extinguished in a
blaze of color.
The yellow and orange pigments in leaves are actually there all
year round - we don't see them in spring and summer because the green chlorophyll
is more concentrated.
The red and purple colors, however, are made in the leaves in the fall. These colors
come from pigments called anthocyanins, and why trees such as
maples and oaks make
them in the autumn is still a bit of a mystery. New research suggests they're produced
partly for protection at a time when the tree is vulnerable. In the fall, trees are
busy taking in nutrients from their leaves and storing those nutrients for the winter.
During this time, the leaf tissues that are responsible for photosynthesis are
especially sensitive to stresses, such as too much light.
Researchers have found that just as the storing process begins, leaves start producing
large amounts of anthocyanins. The researchers believe that these pigments act, in a
way, like sunscreen - they shade the vulnerable parts of the leaves from too much
sunlight at a time when the trees are busy preparing for winter.
The researchers didn't say whether that suncreen is SPF-15 or SPF-30.
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