Dictionary Definition
deciduous adj
1 (of plants and shrubs) shedding foliage at the
end of the growing season [ant: evergreen]
2 (of teeth, antlers, etc.) being shed at the end
of a period of growth; "deciduous teeth"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /dɪˈsɪd.jʊ.əs/|/diːˈsɪd.jʊ.əs/
- /dI"sId.jU.@s/|/di:"sId.jU.@s/
Etymology
From deciduus, from decidoDerived terms
Translations
- Czech: opadavý
- Danish: løvfældende
- Dutch: loof-
- Finnish: lehtensä pudottava
- French: caduc
- German: sommergrün
- Italian: caduco
- Polish: liściasty
Extensive Definition
Deciduous means "falling off at maturity" or
"tending to fall off" (deriving from the Latin word , to fall
off) and is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that
lose their leaves seasonally and to the shedding of other plant
structures such as petals after flowering or fruit when ripe. In a
more specific sense deciduous means the dropping of a part that is
no longer needed, or falling away after its purpose is finished. In
plants it is the result of natural processes; in other fields the
word has a similar meaning, including deciduous antlers in deer or deciduous
teeth, also known as baby teeth, in some mammals, including
human children.
Botany
In botany and horticulture, deciduous plants, including trees, shrubs and herbaceous perennials, are those that lose all of their leaves for part of the year. This process is called abscission. In some cases leaf loss coincides with winter - namely in temperate or polar climates. While in other areas of the world, plants lose their leaves during the dry season or during other seasonal variations in rainfall, including tropical, subtropical and arid regions of the world.The converse of deciduous is evergreen, where green foliage
is persistent year round. Plants that are intermediate may be
called semi-deciduous,
and lose old foliage as new growth begins, others are semi-evergreen
and lose their leaves before the next growing season but retain
some during winter or during dry periods. Some trees, including a
few Oak species
have desiccated leaves that remain on the tree through winter;
these dry persistent leaves are called marcescent leaves and are
dropped in the spring as new growth begins.
Many deciduous plants flower during the period when
they are leafless as this increases the effectiveness of pollination. The absence of
leaves improves wind
transmission of pollen for wind-pollinated plants, and increases
the visibility of the flowers to insects in insect-pollinated
plants. This strategy is not without risks, as the flowers can be
damaged by frost or, in dry season regions, result in water stress
on the plant. Nevertheless, there is much less branch and trunk
breakage from glaze ice storms when leafless, and plants can reduce
water loss due to the reduction in availability of liquid water
during the cold winter days.
Leaf drop or abscission involves complex
physiological signals and changes within plants. The process of
photosynthesis steadily degrades the supply of chlorophylls in
foliage; plants normally replenish chlorophylls during the summer
months. When days grow short and nights are cool, or when plants
are drought stressed, deciduous trees decrease chlorophyll pigment
production allowing other pigments present in the leaf to become
apparent, resulting in fall color. These other pigments include
carotenoids that are
yellow, brown, and orange. Anthocyanin
pigments produce reds and purple colors, though they are not always
present in the leaves but are produced in the foliage in late
summer when sugars are trapped in the leaves after the process of
abscission begins. Parts of the world that have showy displays of
bright fall colors are limited to locations where days become short
and nights are cool. In other parts of the world the leaves of
deciduous trees simply fall off without turning the bright colors
produced from the accumulation of anthocyanin pigments.
The beginning of leaf drop starts when an
abscission layer is formed between the leaf petiole
and the stem. This layer is formed in the spring during active new
growth of the leaf, it consists of layers of cells that can
separate from each other. The cells are sensitive to a plant
hormone called auxin
that is produced by the leaf and other parts of the plant. When the
auxin coming from the leaf is produced at a rate consistent with
that of the auxin from the body of the plant, the cells of the
abscission layer remain connected; in the fall or when under stress
the auxin flow from the leaf decreases or stops triggering cellular
elongation within the abscission layer. The elongation of these
cells break the connection between the different cell layers,
allowing the leaf to break away from the plant, it also forms a
layer that seals the break so the plant does not lose sap.
A number of deciduous plants remove nitrogen and
carbon from the foliage before they are shed and store them in the
form of proteins in the vacuoles of parenchyma cells in the roots
and the inner bark. In the spring these proteins are used as a
nitrogen source during the growth of new leaves or flowers.
Plants with deciduous foliage have both
advantages and disadvantages compared to plants with evergreen
foliage. Since deciduous plants lose their leaves to conserve water
or to better survive winter weather conditions they must regrow new
foliage during the next suitable growing season; this uses more
resources which evergreens do not need to expend. Evergreens suffer
greater water lose during the winter and they also can experience
greater predation pressure, especially when small. Losing leaves in
winter may reduce damage from insects; repairing leaves and keeping
them functional may be more costly than just losing and regrowing
them.
Deciduous woody plants
The deciduous characteristic has developed
repeatedly among woody plants. Trees include Maple, many Oaks, Elm, Aspen, and Birch, among others,
as well as a number of coniferous genera, such as Larch and Metasequoia.
Deciduous shrubs include honeysuckle, poison oak, and many others.
Most temperate woody vines are also deciduous, including grapes, poison ivy,
virginia
creeper, wisteria,
etc. The characteristic is useful in plant identification; for
instance in parts of Southern California and the American
Southeast, deciduous and evergreen oak species may grow side by
side.
Periods of leaf fall often coincide with seasons:
winter in the case of cool-climate plants or the dry-season in the
case of tropical plants , however there are no deciduous species
among tree-like monocotyledonous plants, e.g. palms, yuccas, and
dracenas.
Regions
Deciduous forests can be found in sections of: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Australia, and Africa (Madagascar)(Bahamas). Forests with a majority of tree species that lose their foliage at the end of the typical growing season are called deciduous forests. These forests have distinctive ecosystems, understory growth, and soil dynamics.Two distinctive types of deciduous forest are
found growing around the world.
Temperate
deciduous forest biomes are plant communities distributed in
America, Asia and Europe. The have formed under climatic conditions
which have great seasonable temperature variability with growth
occurring during warm summers and leaf drop in fall and dormancy
during cold winters. These seasonally distinctive communities have
diverse life forms that are impacted greatly by the seasonality of
their climate, mainly temperature and precipitation rates. These
varying and regionally different ecological conditions produce
distinctive forest plant communities in different regions.
Tropical and subtropical deciduous forest biomes have developed
in response not to seasonal temperature variations but to seasonal
rainfall patterns. During prolonged dry periods the foliage is
dropped to conserve water and prevent death from drought. Leaf drop
is not seasonally dependent as it is in temperate climates, and can
occur any time of year and varies by region of the world. Even
within a small local area there can be variations in the timing and
duration of leaf drop; different sides of the same mountain and
areas that have high water tables or areas along streams and rivers
can produce a patchwork of leafy and none leaf trees.
References
deciduous in Catalan: Caducifoli
deciduous in Czech: Listnatý les
deciduous in Danish: Løvfældende
deciduous in German: Laubbäume
deciduous in Spanish: Caducifolio
deciduous in Croatian: Bjelogorica
deciduous in French: Caduc
deciduous in Galician: Caducifolio
deciduous in Icelandic: Sumargræn jurt
deciduous in Italian: Deciduo
deciduous in Japanese: 落葉性
deciduous in Macedonian: Листопадни
растенија
deciduous in Malayalam: ഇലപൊഴിയും വനങ്ങള്
deciduous in Dutch: Bladverliezend
deciduous in Portuguese: Caducifólia
deciduous in Russian: Листопадные растения
deciduous in Simple English: Deciduous
deciduous in Swedish: Lövfällande
deciduous in Yiddish: דעסיידיאוס
deciduous in Chinese: 落葉植物
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
arborary, arboreal, arboreous, arborescent, arboresque, arborical, arboriform, brittle, bushlike, bushy, capricious, changeable, citrous, collapsing, coniferous, corruptible, declining, declivitous, decurrent, dendriform, dendritic, dendroid, descendant, descending, down, down-reaching, downcoming, downfalling, downgoing, downhill, downsinking, downward, drooping, dropping, dying, ephemeral, evanescent, evergreen, fading, falling, fickle, fleeting, flitting, fly-by-night,
flying, fragile, frail, fugacious, fugitive, half-hardy, hardwood, hardy, impermanent, impetuous, impulsive, inconstant, insubstantial, momentary, mortal, mutable, nondeciduous, nondurable, nonpermanent, on the
descendant, on the downgrade, passing, perennial, perishable, piny, plummeting, plunging, sagging, scrubbly, scrubby, scrublike, setting, short-lived, shrubby, shrublike, sinking, softwood, submerging, subsiding, temporal, temporary, tottering, transient, transitive, transitory, treelike, tumbledown, undurable, unenduring, unstable, volatile