Journal article
Green leaf colours in a suburban Australian hotspot: Colour differences exist between exotic trees from far afield compared with local species
MJ Grose
Landscape and Urban Planning | ELSEVIER | Published : 2016
Abstract
Endemic species are often replaced by plantings from non-local areas in new suburbs in the developed world. Does this lead to colour changes? This paper compares colour in the leaves of exotic trees planted in suburbs to that of endemics in the Southwest Australian Floristic Region. Colour in plant parts was assessed by the Natural Colour System of Sweden, which enabled quantitative comparison between species. Hue, chromaticness, percentage yellow, blackness, whiteness, luminescence, and visual lightness were determined. The leaves of Australian trees were less chromatic and darker than exotic trees, suggesting that colour changes are occurring with suburbanisation in this region.
Grants
Funding Acknowledgements
I thank Robert Powell, of Conservation and Land Management, for assisting with site locations for several of the species in the SWAFR and for noting colour changes with suburbanisation. Karin Fridell Anter of Sweden gave invaluable advice with colour using the NCS, as did Paul Green-Armytage of the Colour Society of Australia, and Margaret Pope in Sydney; Sue Finch and Sandy Clarke of the University of Melbourne assisted with statistics. I also thank Simcha Lev-Yadun and an anonymous reviewer, and the University of Melbourne for an Early Career Research Grant.