May 042014
 

1-DSC09743Now that all of our deciduous trees are in leaf, and roadside ditches and forest floors in the Georgia Piedmont are green with life, it is a marvelous time to take a walk and see how many different leaf shapes you can find.  Many shapes are particular to a certain kind of tree, shrub, or vine; some, like that of the maple, have even been celebrated on a country’s flag.  There are the three jagged leaflets of poison ivy, and five of Virginia creeper; the many lobes (rounded or jagged) of the oaks; the tulip-shaped leaves of the tulip tree tree; the five-pointed star of the sweet gum; and the heart-shaped leaves of the wild yam.  Some plants cannot settle upon one leaf shape, but instead have several.  Leaves of the sassafras tree can be simple ovals, shaped like mittens, or have three broad, blunt lobes.

It is one of those wonders of the natural world that there is such diversity in the shapes of leaves.  As one website on leaf shapes remarks, “Plants have leaves in many different shapes – the thicker the book you refer to, the more leaf shapes they seem to find.”   The various classifications and permutations of shape form an arcane language, limited to a handful of botanists and elementary Montessori school students:  terms such as runcinate, trifoliate, cordate, digitate, and deltoid.  Although the words may be unfamilar, they describe the shapes of leaves encountered all around us:  dandelion, clover, morning glory, maple, cottonwood.  Beyond terms for general shape are further classifications for leaf form:  toothed or untoothed, simple or compound, entire or lobed.   Finally, even though one set of terms might be used to classify a leaf from a particular species of plant, some plants, particularly oaks, have leaves that vary considerably while keeping to generally the same overall shape.

Why?  Why is there such diversity in leaves?  What makes one leaf angular and another rounded, one leaf wide and another narrow?  These are the kinds of questions wondering children might ask, after being satisfied with a general explanation for the color of the sky and the forces causing the wind to blow.  And, like most questions children generate, the answer is not an easy one.   Indeed, there is no one clear explanation out there.  Only a few days ago, a physics blog reported a new theoretical model that purports to explain all leaf shape variation as an incidental effect of the different patterns of veins in the leaf.

Some aspects of leaf shape have been explained based upon comparing tropical forest plants with temperate forest ones, such as those here in Georgia.  A visit to a tropical rainforest, or a greenhouse full of tropical plants, will reveal that most tropical leaves are thicker than temperate ones, as well as more rounded and smooth-edged (untoothed).   Tropical plants retain their leaves for years, while deciduous plants in Georgia forests all keep their leaves only for one season.  As a result, tropical leaves are sturdier than temperate forest ones, and therefore thicker.  Thinner leaves require less energy to produce, and are more effective at gas exchange needed for photosynthesis.  However, there is a cost of having thinner leaves:  they are not as sturdy, particularly in areas distant from the major leaf veins (which provide structural support for the leaf).  So those distant areas are simply done away with, resulting in lobed leaves like those of the white oak.  The lobes (or teeth) of many leaves of Georgia plants also help to reduce wind resistance (and the damage that could result from it).  Also, botanists have noticed that lobed or toothed leaves can permit sunlight to reach leaves beneath them, so perhaps the indentations help the plants filter sunlight down to leaves on their lower branches or stems.

Ultimately, we simply do not know why there are so many leaf shapes are out there, and how (if at all) a star-shaped leaf might better serve a sweet gum tree’s needs than the compound structure of ovate leaflets of a hickory.  It is humbling and perhaps even a bit comforting, though, that something so commonplace as the forms that leaves take has managed to remain so mysterious for so long a time.

This article was originally published on May 8, 2010.  The original photo has been replaced with a recent one I took, of a sassafras leaf. 

Mar 162014
 

After many hours of heavy rainfall, I set out today along Piney Woods Church Road, stopping at ruts, potholes, and ditches to see what I might discover there.  I took a number of reflection photos, but my favorite is this one, with its bright splashes of color from the fallen leaves that have collected on the water surface.

Flotsam

Mar 112014
 

Thank you, Karen Reed, for your excellent suggestion of a title for today’s photograph of a greenbrier leaf.  I feel drawn to photographing the fascinating internal structures of leaves, and this is one of the most stunning examples I have yet encountered.

Chlorophyllia

Mar 042014
 

With overcast skies and below-seasonal temperatures anticipated for several days yet, I am hungry for bright colors, which are all too scarce on my daily Piney Woods Church Road walks.  Today I glimpsed a flash of brilliant red, when a cardinal alighted in a loblolly pine tree at the intersection with Hutcheson Ferry Road.  Alas, my +10 macro lens was on at the time, and by the time I had unscrewed it and pointed the camera toward the pine branches, the bird was gone.  Fortunately, though, water oak leaves this time of year are quite obliging (and far less ambulatory).  I don’t think I could ever be sated by all the possibilities these leaves furnish for photographs evocative of stained glass windows.

Stained Glass Leaf

Mar 012014
 

I ventured to Callaway Gardens yesterday afternoon, spending nearly two hours in the Day Butterfly Center.  The result, of course, is these photographs of…tropical plant leaves.  I must say that the leaves were much more willing subjects for the lens than the butterflies.  I will include a few butterfly images in a second post from my trip.  Meanwhile, these leaves often welcome splashes of color in a drab, still somewhat wintery, time of year.

Tropical Leaves One

Tropical Leaves Two

Tropical Leaves Three

Tropical Leaves Four

Feb 272014
 

After a marvelous day-long composition workshop with Kathryn Kolb last weekend, I have been thinking a great deal about geometry and nature.  I have begun exploring the diverse colors and forms all around me on my Piney Woods Church Road walk.  Water oak leaves in winter, with their vibrant splotches of green, orange, red, and brown, make fascinating subjects for the camera lens.  Until today, I have always concentrated on entire leaves and clusters of leaves.  This time, I zoomed the lens a bit further;  The result is this image.

Equal Areas

Feb 232014
 

Spring is underway along Piney Woods Church Road.  Late this afternoon, after taking many more photographs of the daffodils, I noticed that several of the shrubs along the roadside are coming into leaf.  Winter has not yet relinquished its hold; by mid-week, temperatures are supposed to reach highs in the 40s and lower 50s and lows into the 20s.  I worry about all of the spring growth — will it be able to endure the return to colder days?

New Growth

Feb 142014
 

On the occasion of Valentine’s Day, I found myself seeking out heart images along Piney Woods Church Road.  I found one that was rather intriguing but fell short of beautiful:  a pair of crushed pine cone husks on the gravel road that together formed the shape of a heart.  Elsewhere, though, there were abundant greenbrier leaves still on the vines, many quite heart-shaped indeed.  I settled on this photo, in which the leaf becomes a screen for the shadowy forms behind it.

Happy Valentine’s Day, everyone!

Greenbrier Leaf

Feb 052014
 

After the overnight rainstorm, the ditches along Piney Woods Church Road had filled with water once again.  In one of them, I saw this oak leaf floating, the edges of the leaf slowly taking on water.   The stillness of the scene offers no hint of the raw winter’s day on which I took this photograph.

After the Storm