Sometimes ash trees lose their leaves because of a natural phenomenon that occurs every now and then that scientists cannot explain. Also, ash trees tend to overproduce leaves every spring and then regret that "decision", causing leaves to drop (they will then grow new ones.) Having a warm period in early spring followed by a cold period can also cause ash trees to lose their leaves.
The leaves of a green plant would typically lose the most chloroplasts as summer turns to fall. This is because chloroplasts are primarily located in the mesophyll cells of leaves, which are responsible for photosynthesis. As the days get shorter and temperatures drop in the fall, leaves begin to senesce and chloroplasts degrade or are broken down.
Trees that keep their leaves in summer and lose them in autumn are deciduous.
Some conifers would fit these requirements.
Trees do not have excess leaves in Summer,they have the number required to carry out their function.
If a tree loses all its leaves in the Summer the chances are it is dead. If it loses its leaves in Autumn, and is deciduous, then it will grow new ones in Spring.
Maily the the leaves. They turn orange or yellow in color
No, in fact the opposite, they need their branches to grow leaves which photosynthesis (making their own food.)
It is its deciduous :)
A deciduous forest is a climax community that changes leaves in the fall.
They would become evergreens.
No, leaves can lose water.
I think none, because Epidermis cells are on leaves.