No; leaves get their green pigment from chlorophyl, but not all plants depend primarily on chlorophyl and other pigments are present. These colors don't inhibit photosynthesis and are present along with green, but they are 'louder' (meaning you see the red but not green, for example). So short answer--no :). The colors from a leaf normally is red, brown , green, pink , purple
... roses are red because its fireRED leafs are green because its leafGREEN
All of the pigments except for green. Leaves are green because that is the only color not absorbed and therefore is reflected.
Travis Green.
Because a leaf normally has green pigment in it called chlorophyll. These pigments absorb all the spectrums of the light except for the green spectrum, which is why leafs appear green.
leafs
chlorophyll.
the leafs on a pine tree don't change colour they stay green all year but the rest of them change colour like the hardwood trees
Chlorophyll A and B is what gives leafs their green colour.
The roots of a plant aren't green because there is no chlorophyll in the roots. All of the chlorophyll in the chloroplasts are taken to the leaves of a plant. <3
It is the leafs! Yep it is!
green leafs
leafs and have a twig for them to climb on