Overview:
Plant scientists predict that the fall colors will peak later this year due to a dry summer. The leaves change color as the days get shorter, causing the chlorophyll to break down and revealing the yellows and oranges of carotenoids, and the reds of anthocyanin. Cooler temperatures also tell the trees to shed their leaves. However, dry soil can dull the vibrancy of foliage, and a warm patch of weather can also dim fall colors. Despite the challenges, local experts remain hopeful for a bright fall this year.
Following a dry summer, plant scientists are predicting the leaves will change color later this year, with many still counting on a colorful fall.
The state Department of Conservation and Recreationโs Interactive Fall Foliage Map predicts the fall colors will peak between Oct. 27 and Nov. 3. According to the Old Farmerโs Almanac, this lands a week later than the typical peak for New Englandโs brightest colors โ the second and third weeks of October.
To understand this yearโs foliage forecast, local experts broke down the science behind the changing leaves.
According to Tony Reiber, who teaches horticulture and runs the Farm and Food Systems program at Greenfield Community College, trees sense the days shortening in the fall. With less sunlight, the plant cells stop creating chlorophyll, the chemical that absorbs sunlight during photosynthesis and gives the leaves their green hue in the spring and summer.
โAs the days get shorter, the chlorophyll will start to break down, because it requires a lot of energy for the plants to make chlorophyll,โ Reiber explained.
Without chlorophyll, the leaves blush into the colors of the chemicals underneath chlorophyll, often the yellows and oranges of carotenoids. In other words, leaves do not create these colors; they become the color of these chemicals already in their makeup.
โTheyโre always there, theyโre just not visible because the chlorophyll is a dominant pigment,โ Reiber said.

As for reds, the leaves produce anthocyanin from stored sugars. Reiber said the carotenoids and anthocyanins act as a sunscreen for the leaves, protecting the plant cells.
Elsbeth Walker, a plant biology professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, compared the protective yellows, oranges and reds to a summer tan.
โThe darker pigments in your skin are protective,โ Walker explained. โImagine if you sat outside and you didnโt have any clothes on and you didnโt have any sunscreen on. Think how sunburnt and hurt by the sun youโd be, and thatโs what trees are doing every day.โ
Cooler temperatures also tell the trees to shed their leaves. Ashley Keiser, an assistant professor of soil and ecosystem ecology at UMass Amherst, explained that the trees must sense a significant gap between daytime and nighttime temperatures. ClimateCentral.org declared a drop of 9 to 12 degrees as the sweet spot.
โThose cooler nights that we had that really felt like fall, itโs a great signal for the trees,โ Keiser explained.
โTrees love getting down in the low 40s, mid to high 30s,โ said Richard Harper, who teaches urban and community forestry at UMass Amherst.

With the chilly September nights, one scientist expects an even brighter fall this year.
โI expect to have a full spectrum of colors,โ said Peter Jeranyama, who teaches plant physiology at UMass Amherst.
Harper and Walker also predict that the regionโs dry summer may cause the trees to shed their leaves later in the season to conserve water. The Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs declared a Level 2 Significant Drought in the Connecticut River Valley on Sept. 9.
Keiser said dry soil can dull the vibrancy of foliage. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a warm patch of weather can also dim fall colors.
Keiser samples soil in Harvard Forest in Petersham for her research lab at UMass. In recent samples, Keiser noticed low moisture levels in the soil. She hopes more rainfall will help nourish the dry soil, brighten the leaves and even possibly prolong the foliage season.
โI think itโs a mixed bag. Weโre not as dry as we were last year, so thatโs promising, but itโs really hard to tell,โ Keiser said. โBut maybe the damage is done from the summer. I guess weโll see.โ
Each scientist stressed that forecasting foliage is difficult, due to multiple factors like sunlight, temperature and rainfall.
โEven if this yearโs not going to be the perfect foliage season, I still say, itโs still New England,โ Harper said. โPeople are still going to travel all over the world to come to New England to see the autumn leaves change, so fear not.โ
Harper traced New Englandโs classic fall colors to its โrare combinationโ of cool nights and bright native trees. Chilly late summer and fall nights awaken the crimsons of red maple trees and scarlet oaks, and the oranges of sugar maple trees and American beech trees in Massachusettsโ forests.
โEven poison ivy turns red this time of year,โ Harper noted.
Before moving to Pelham, Keiserโs experiences with autumn in Colorado were one-note.
โYou get this one whole sea of yellow with the aspens, but you just donโt get the pops of orange and deep red and some of that purply color,โ Keiser recalled. โWe get this rainbow and vibrancy in New England foliage I just think is so striking.โ
Plant scientistsโ favorite foliage spots
Outside of their classrooms and labs, local experts enjoy watching the leaves change from their favorite spots.
Harper picked Route 2 and Mount Monadnock as his favorite for foliage sightseeing, and Jeranyama takes in the turning leaves on his drive to Cape Cod.
In Franklin County, Reiber mentioned Mohawk Trailโs stretch into Charlemont. Walker kayaks at Cranberry Pond in Sunderland, where she watches the leaves change in the forest around her and their reflection in the water.
Keiser enjoys seeing the โrainbowโ of fall colors at Harvard Forest where she samples soil.
โYou donโt have to drive all the way to New Hampshire to get great foliage,โ Keiser said, โor Vermont.โ

