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Yes, each fall sugar maples (and other deciduous trees) remove the chlorophyll and other important compounds and nutrients from their leaves (which causes the other colors to become visible) and then drop the leaves.
Chlorophyll
You boil it in an alcohol bath.
No quiten las hojas (don't remove the leaves). No saquen las hojas (don't take the leaves out).
To test for chlorophyll:1- We will take a variegated leaf and detach it2- then we will detach the leaf and draw the same leaf on the paper to see the change.3- then we will test for starch4- Only the green places with chlorophyll will turn black blue in color the places without chlorophyll will become brown in color.
yes
Long-term growth in the dark (several weeks) if you need the plant alive. Short term soaking in alcohol will remove the majority of the pigments from the leaf. 95% Ethanol or 70% isopropanol for 30-minutes should do the trick.
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You can remove chlorophyll from leaves by breaking down the plant cells' membranes using heat and rubbing alcohol
alcohol is used to remove chlorophyll
chromatography
Yes, each fall sugar maples (and other deciduous trees) remove the chlorophyll and other important compounds and nutrients from their leaves (which causes the other colors to become visible) and then drop the leaves.
You boil it in an alcohol bath.
Chlorophyll
add the leaf to boiling ethanol in a water bath for a few minutes (the boiling ethanol dissolves the chlorophyll and removes the green colour from the leaf - it turns white so it is easy to see the change in colour) wash with water to rehydrate and soften the leaf
No quiten las hojas (don't remove the leaves). No saquen las hojas (don't take the leaves out).
You are probably not going to remove the "stain" from the cover. It has been bleached of all pigment.