10/15/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/15/2025 08:19
Posted 8:32 a.m. Monday , Oct. 13 , 2025
UWL scientists explain the basic science behind the beauty
Unusually warm and dry weather stretching from late September into early October may be delaying the region's peak fall color display - and could result in a shorter, less vibrant season, says Adam Schneider, assistant professor of biology at UW-La Crosse.
"Some trees have already started dropping their leaves in response to the dry conditions and shortening daylight hours," explains Schneider. "This year, the peak will probably arrive in a week or two," he says.
Still, any cooler temperatures and rain in October could enhance the fall color, he adds. "In October last year, we had a couple of weeks of cooler, seasonable temperatures and rain that turned what looked like it was going to be a bust into a great display," he says.
According to the Travel Wisconsin Fall Color Report, peak color in the La Crosse area is currently expected during the fourth week of October, slightly later than usual. In a typical year, La Crosse County tends to hit its peak in mid-October.
The most brilliant fall foliage results from a combination of sunny, warm days, cool nights, and consistent rainfall. More rain generally promotes vibrant colors by helping trees maintain their health and boosting sugar production. However, sudden heat waves or dry spells can dramatically impact the foliage, Schneider warns.
Across Wisconsin, fall colors are progressing steadily and are expected to reach their peak at different times throughout October. You can track the changing colors across the state on the Travel Wisconsin Fall Color Report.
Why do leaves change color?
Leaf color change is determined by several factors, which is why trees change at slightly different times during the fall season. Schneider and UWL Chemistry Professor Heather Schenckpoint to several factors that influence leaf color:
Some of these conditions - namely soil, weather and tree health - vary from year to year, causing slight changes to the length of the fall foliage display and brilliance of the leaves each year.
Below S c henck answers other common science questions related to fall foliage.
What causes fall leaves to change color?
We are used to seeing green leaves throughout the summer months . If you were to shrink down and look inside green leaves , you'd see that they are swamped with molecule s that make it look green - a .k.a. c hlorophyll molecules . C hlorophyll has an important job in side a leaf. It takes light from the sun and converts it into energy that the tree uses to grow through a process called photosynthesis. Chlorophyll breaks down in sunlight, so throughout the summer this molecule is continually being remade.
In the fall , in the north, we have less sun during the day and trees slow and then stop producing c hlorophyll molecules. When this happens, other molecules that were alrea d y in side the leaf - just not as prominent as c hlorophyll - begin to appear. Basically, leaves are chemically re vealing other molecules al ready there, but we couldn't see them because the leaf was so filled with chlorophyll .
Why do leaves turn different colors?
Other molecules besides chlorophyll can give color to a leaf. In fact, there are so many other color molecules that they are named in classes. A common class of molecules that give leaves a yellow-orange color are called carotenoids. Carotenoids can help plants gather more light in an energy range that chlorophylls don't pick up well.
Another class of molecules that make a leaf look red or purple are called anthocyanins. These color molecules also show up in our foods. You may ask: Why are carrots orange? Carotenoids. Why are apples red? Anthocyanins.
What determines leaf color?
The other color molecules - anthocyanins and carotenoids - are a more diverse group than chlorophyll . Therefore, we see a spectrum of di fferen t colors. For example a b lack m aple might produce more of one type of color molecule , making it look a deep orange. A different black maple might produce less of that molecule and more of another, making it look yellow . It is the concentrations of these more divers e molecules that can make a tree a certain color or even different colors throughout the same tree or the same leaf .
Although scientists understand how leaves change color at the molecular level, they still haven't come to a consensus on why some trees turn red (or why the new growth of some plants is also reddish). Here are two hypotheses:
What makes fall leaves more colorful?
When is peak leaf color change in Wisconsin?
The color change in Wisconsin typically starts in mid-September and ends in October. The northern part of the state will begin to see change before the south. The La Crosse area is estimated to peak the fourth week in October. Check out 2025 Fall Color report to find the estimated week of the peak in your area.
Is climate change having (or may it have) noticeable effects on when or where colors appear?
Compared to the 1950s, Wisconsin weather is three degrees warmer and 15% wetter. While three degrees may not seem like much, it means that it takes an extra week in the fall for plants to start experiencing cooler temperatures. Both moisture and warmer temperatures, especially at night, tend to delay the onset of fall color. Also, the overall increased variability of rainfall over the last fifty years - flash floods interspersed by long droughts - has a big effect on tree health and thus the length and color of the fall display.
Listen in to Wisconsin Public Radio's The Morning Show featuring UWL Biology Professor Tim Gerber and UWL Chemistry Professor Heather Schenck sharing the science behind why fall leaves change color.