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Red Means Stop
Insects like green. Tree leaves know.
They change colour
According to a Native American myth, four hunters killed
the Great Bear in heaven. It was autumn then. The bear's blood
splashed over the forests drenching the leaves red. When the
hunters cooked its meat, the fat dripped, colouring the leaves
yellow. Hence every year as autumn approaches, the leaves
prepare to change colour from green to a fiery red to a dazzling
yellow. While this folklore makes for a bedtime story, science
has another explanation.
Production of pigments, just like any other function of the
plant, comes at an energy cost. The increased presence of
pigments like carotenoids and anthocyanin direct the change.
But why invest in leaves that are about to fall?
The red colour is a warning to the insects to stay away from
the tree, says the theory of coevolution. Marco Archetti from
the department of zoology, University of Oxford, UK, studied
apple trees to provide some proof.
Apple trees bloom in autumn. At other times, the tree has
enough nutrients to fortify itself. But after fruiting when
it is about to shed its leaves-the food producers-the tree
needs to show that it is still capable of warding off attack.
Hence the colour change and it works.
Archetti examined two trees each from 2,170 apple varieties
and observed their association with aphids. The red-leaved
trees attracted fewer aphids than green varieties. The ones
that developed on red-leaved trees had a survival rate of
29 per cent as compared to those on green trees (61 per cent).
While 62 per cent of the wild varieties in central Asia were
found to change their colour to red in autumn, only 2.8 per
cent of the cultivated varieties turned red. Trees under cultivation
are artificially selected for high productivity. This selection
overrides many traits including their mode of defence. Hence
the trees do not change colour.
The study was reported in the April 15 issue of the Proceedings
of the Royal Society B.
Source: Down
To Earth, June 2009

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