In the fall, we rake up the leaves and dump them in the compost bin. Stir up the pile every week or so, and keep it damp but not really wet. By spring, the leaves will have become compost, ready to be mixed in the soil of the garden.
aerobic activity (oxygen + humidity + temperature = Broken down leaves)
Autumn or Fall, just before
Leaves!
It Happens Every Spring was created on 1949-06-10.
leaves
Although most people get excited about an early spring, it is not always a good thing for nature. During an early spring, crops and other plants bloom early. This leaves plants vulnerable to the often-devastating effects of subsequent freezes that usually happen later on. As global warming continues, early or false spring happens more frequently.
Springs form where the water table intersects the ground surface
aerobic activity (oxygen + humidity + temperature = Broken down leaves)
What happens to dead leaves that fall to the ground
The leaves are discarded in the autumn to allow a period of dormancy and then in spring they are replaced.
The deciduous forest is one that has trees which shed their leaves in autumn. In the spring those tress come to life with new growth of leaves and branches and sometimes flowers.
Deciduous trees like Oaks, Maples, Elms, etc. get their leaves back in spring.
they stay on the ground
they hit the ground while farting and screaming at the same time
No, frost will kill the leaves above ground, but the rhubarb plant is perennial & will return the following spring.
In the autumn or fall, leaves begin to lose their chlorophyll and turn different colors. After that, the leaves lose their cohesion and fall to the ground.
Deciduous trees leaves fall in the autumn and rot on the ground and form a mulch which in turn feeds the tree.
Continuous spells or traps negated by Silent Insect, will become active again once it leaves the field.
Listen, they stay alive forever. Falling leaves hit the ground and are gradually biodegraded by bacteria etc, and eventually form leaf mould, which helps enrich the soil. (That's if they are not swept up by the park keeper!)