Why do some trees hold onto their leaves longer than others?

            The timing of leaf loss varies with species, site and season. Day length and temperature are the two triggers for colour change and leaf loss.

            The timing is usually species-specific but is also related to site conditions. For example, a fairly dry season would result in some trees leaves dropping early, before they had turned, in a reaction to the drought stress; leaves may also die on the tree but hang on until much later. Species variations are also important. Norway maples normally have green and fully functional leaves that keep on photosynthesizing until two or three weeks after leaves of sugar maples have turned. If both are on a cramped site, Norway maples, with extra weeks of energy storage, may outgrow and outlive sugar maples.

            Oaks keep their leaves much longer than many other species because a layer of cells that forms where the leaf stem is attached, called the abcision layer, does not form a complete barrier. In the beech trees, which are in the same family, an incomplete layer is seen in younger trees, but mature beeches, 25 to 30 years old, form a complete layer. There are also sex differences; leaves of female ginkgo trees usually colour and drop earlier than those of males. And trees near street lights may be affected by the longer light exposure and keep their leaves longer.