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Try GROUND FROST
The bulk of most leaves is composed of the specialized ground tissue mesophyll.
It is a chemical change. The substance of the leaves is changing.
Above ground system in plants consists of stem, leaves and flowers.
Deciduous trees start to drop their leaves in the autumn leaving the forest with a layer of leaves. The leaves decay and eventually become part of the fertile floor of the forest. The decaying process happens in many ways. Animals and insects ingest (eat) the leaves converting it to fecal material adding fertilizer to the ground. Worms chew through the leaves and fungus (mold) and bacteria also help consume the ground cover accomplishing the same thing.
No, frost will kill the leaves above ground, but the rhubarb plant is perennial & will return the following spring.
Ground frost or hoar frost.
There was frost on the ground
Air frost - or ground frost
Brown spots on the edges of leaves are signs of frost damage.
If you mean frost in the ground then it's routa in Finnish.
No.
Frost should not affect a Holly. Evergreens shed leaves at all times of the year but never all at the same time. If shedding is excessive then as long as the ground is not frozen try a good watering as the roots could be dry.
Not really. The "cold hardy" Japanese types are cold tolerant only in the sence the roots can survive a degree of frost. The entire stem and leaves will be killed by any heavy frost, right down to ground level. Furthermore, the windy climate will rip the leaves to shreds. Banana plants do NOT like the wind.
frost
Yes, It is
Frost is a form of deposition and requires a surface (on the ground) to form its ice crystals. Snow can only form in clouds - the ice crystals grow around condensation nuclei and then fall to the ground. Frost is confined to the ground.