Professor Pip's Awesome Autumn Colors

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Professor Pip bounced out of his lab, his bushy tail swishing with excitement. A little girl named Lily was looking at a red maple leaf with a puzzled expression.

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"Professor Pip," she asked, "Why is this leaf red? It was green all summer long!"

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"Aha! That's a fantastic question, Lily," he chirped, tapping his crooked spectacles. "The secret is a special green food maker called chlorophyll."

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He explained that plants use chlorophyll to turn sunlight into delicious sugary food. That's why leaves are usually so very green!

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"Think of chlorophyll like a tiny little green chef," Professor Pip said with a grin. "It's working all day to cook for the tree."

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The chlorophyll is so busy and so green that it hides all the other beautiful colors inside the leaf.

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He held up a hand. "But what happens when the days get shorter?"

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"And the sun doesn't shine as long and as warm?" he added, looking at the sky.

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The trees know that winter is coming and it's time to rest. So they stop making that yummy sugary food.

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This means they don't need the chlorophyll chefs anymore.

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Slowly, the tree begins to pull all of the green chlorophyll back into its branches and trunk.

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It's like the little green chefs are going on a long winter vacation.

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As the green in the leaves fades away, something amazing happens. The colors that were always hiding underneath get to come out and play!

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The yellows and oranges were there all along, patiently waiting for their turn to be seen.

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And some leaves, like this one, get to show off a whole new color, like bright red or deep purple.

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"But where does the red come from?" Lily asked, her eyes wide with wonder.

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Professor Pip explained that some trees make special new sugars in the fall, which turn the leaves bright red.

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It's like a final, beautiful burst of color before the leaves fall to the ground.

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Lily looked at the red leaf with a new understanding and appreciation. "So the green is just sleeping?" she asked.

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"Exactly!" Professor Pip cheered. "It will wake up again in the spring, ready to start its amazing work all over again."

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