Superior Fall Colors: September 22, 2020

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Superior Fall Colors

September 22, 2020JPEG


Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan are typically among the first parts of the
contiguous United States to experience autumn color. Fall 2020 was no
exception.
Aided by a period of chilly weather, fall foliage was peaking in the region’s
forests in late September. On September 22, 2020, the Visible Infrared
Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on NOAA-20 acquired this image of the
area around Lake Superior, which is rich with aspen, birch, maple, basswood,
and other deciduous hardwood trees.
In autumn, the leaves on deciduous trees change colors as they lose
chlorophyll, the molecule that plants use to synthesize food. Chlorophyll
makes plants appear green because it absorbs red and blue sunlight as it
strikes leaf surfaces. It is not a stable compound and plants have to
continuously synthesize it to keep their leaves green—a process that requires
ample sunlight and warm temperatures. When temperatures drop and days
shorten, levels of chlorophyll drop as well.
As green chlorophyll fades, other leaf pigments—carotenoids and
anthocyanins—show off their colors. Carotenoids absorb blue-green and blue
light, appearing yellow; anthocyanins absorb blue, blue-green, and green light,
appearing red.
As explained by the U.S. Forest Service, certain species of trees produce
certain colors. Oaks generally turn red, brown, or russet; aspen and yellow-
poplar turn golden. Maples differ by species. Red maple turns brilliant scarlet;
sugar maple, orange-red; and black maple, yellow. Leaves of some trees,
such as elms, simply become brown.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Joshua Stevens, using VIIRS data
from NASA EOSDIS/LANCE and GIBS/Worldview and the Joint Polar
Satellite System (JPSS). Caption by Adam Voiland.

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