A Featured Event: Fall Foliage
As we canoe camped in Killarney Provincial Park two weeks ago, we watched fall really begin as the colours began to change here and there, and leaves started to drop from the trees onto our campsite. Still a long way to go, but a sign of more colours to come.
The colour shift is keyed by day length, rather than temperature or frost -- as the days grow shorter, the trees begin to pull nutrients back into the tree for storage over the winter, and the production of chlorophyll (the green pigment that captures the suns energy) shuts down. As the greens fade, reds, yellows and oranges that had been hiding there begin to show. Carotenes give us the yellows and oranges, while anthocyanins provide the reds. Try this activity to witness the invisible colours right in the classroom.
Again, the intensity of the colour has more to do with sunlight than with temperature. Colours will be more intense if there’s been a good growing season – plenty of water and sunlight. Also, reds are more intense when fall sunshine allows the production of additional sugars and cool, but not freezing nights slow the enzyme activity that destroys the anthocyanin pigments. With a generally heavy spring snowpack (good) but a hot, dry summer (bad) and possibly plenty of fall sunshine (good), this year’s predictions are, well, up in the air. Some leaves may also change early due to drought stress.
Colour can be quite variable, both within and among different species. White Ash can vary from yellow to purple. Male Red Maples tend to be red and females yellow. For oranges, look to Sugar Maples and Staghorn Sumac; for yellows, Silver Maple, Trembling Aspen and White Birch; for reds, Red Maple, Pin Cherry and oaks. There is some evidence that individual trees turn a similar colour each fall. Try your own observational experiment by noting the colours of trees nearby your home or school in a journal or painting and compare the colours in subsequent years.
Finally, a corky layer forms between the leaf and the tree, eventually weakening and detaching as the leaves fall and drift on the autumn winds. Eventually, the leaves find their way to forest floor, where although dead, they become part of an important cycle providing life by decomposing, providing food for numerous soil organisms, and putting nutrients back in the soil. Some trees, however – oaks and beeches in particular – don’t form this corky layer and remain on the tree long into the winter and at times even the next spring. These trees are termed marcescent.
Now, colours are at or slightly past their peak in Algonquin Provincial Park and the Haliburton Highlands. To find out the extent of colour in Ontario provincial parks, visit Ontario Parks Fall Colour Report.
Other Happenings: