When I was a little tyke my mother told me the colored fall leaves were created by the fall leak fairies.
Later in my education years I was told the colored leaves came because in the fall the trees quit producing chlorophyl and that allowed the other colors to shine through. Now I don't know what to think.
Go with the fairies. It's more fun and intriguing.
I agree, go with the fairies, but only if they stop leaking.
If ever I would type something without a flaw I would have to change my personality. This comes from being a two finger typer ( I won't mention which fingers) and I can't type and look at the screen at the same time.Then to with my age I never know it I have enough time left to type it again.
"Mama says that alligators are ornery... 'cause they got all them teeth but no toothbrush. "
dancers
Loc: melbourne.victoria, australia
I learned at a very early age that I could not trust my mother.
Wes
Loc: Dallas
You must have had a good biology teacher in Butler. They told me the same thing when I earned my MS in botany at OSU.
I think I’d go with the bio classes.
Nice photos.
Like the analogy.... on the other hand .... what did mom tell you about Santa Claus.... what did you find out later.
Always trust your mother. Yeah, they don't know all the answers but what else are you gonna say?
ron
SpikeW wrote:
When I was a little tyke my mother told me the colored fall leaves were created by the fall leak fairies.
Later in my education years I was told the colored leaves came because in the fall the trees quit producing chlorophyl and that allowed the other colors to shine through. Now I don't know what to think.
I personally blame any typo on auto-correct. My botany instructor would suggest the 'no chlorophyll' option but I am going with the leaf fairies option from now on. I suspect I could have been friends with your mother. I like her way of thinking. Thanks for posting.
It is actually both. The fairies are the ones who create the chlorophyl. In fall they start doing other things to prepare for winter.
Wes
Loc: Dallas
Take it from a guy with a master's degree in botany:
The abscission layer, a barrier of thin-walled parenchyma cells, develops across the stem (or petiole) at the base of a leaf, flower, or fruit as it approaches the time of falling from a plant. That causes the leaf to fall.
The chlorophyll story is also correct.
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