

CH. Ill, 11] COLORATION OF LEAVES 93 



chlorophyll, or by air-spaces, hairs, or other structural fea- 

 tures. In a few cases no brown color appears, and by the 

 slow fading of the xanthophyll the tissues are left nearly 

 white, as happens to some extent in our Birches. 



All autumnal coloration of foliage rests upon these fiye 

 colors, either singly or in combinations, modified somewhat 

 by other substances, or by the leaf structure. The student 

 will notice how different they are in their significance to the 

 plant, foi__while chlorophyll ha.s a^ wpll-knQBa^and-jastlv 

 important function, and xanthophyll an unknown but prob- 

 ^aBly" imjjui tSnt function, 'erythrophyli and the browns are 

 mere chemical l e e^ulta!fs > of the physical and chemical con- 

 ditions prevailing in dying leaves, and white is the natural 

 color of the unaltered leaf structure. In autumn leaves, 

 obviously, none of the colors seem to have any functional 

 utility to the plants, and autumnal coloration as a whole 

 appears to represent simply a gigantic chemical incident, 

 comparable with the blue of the sky and the red of a sunset. 

 Though thus but an incident, it is a happy one for mankind, 

 in whose elevated enjoyment of nature it forms a great 

 factor. 



Everybody knows that autumnal coloration is far more 

 brilliant in some climates and some seasons than others, 

 thus showing a marked sensitiveness to external conditions. 

 Something depends on the kinds of plants which constitute 

 the flora, for plants differ in their susceptibility to the 

 color changes. Again, the coloration is notable only in those 

 regions where the transition from summer to autumn is 

 rather abrupt, and the vitality of the leaves is suddenly 

 checked while they are still full of sap ; and it is relatively 

 poor in places of gradual transition from summer to autumn 

 where the leaves lose their sap before dying. It is through 

 the abrupt check to the vitality of the leaves that early 

 frosts help the coloring, though they do not cause it, as 

 popularly believed. In fact, any cause which hastens the 

 waning of leaf vitality brings on the coloration more quickly. 



