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Color

Flowers produce color to attract specific pollinators. A red rose absorbs nearly all light below the red wavelengths, appearing intensely red. A yellow rose reflects some blue light, appearing unsaturated yellow. Flowers reflect light within the visible spectrum to attract pollinators, with white flowers reflecting all wavelengths equally. Color allows flowers to target particular pollinators. Unlike printing which uses pigments to divide the spectrum, flowers shift the transition between absorbing and reflecting light, producing color by modifying the reflected wavelength. Most flowers absorb blue to yellow light and reflect green to red light, with the transition point determining their color.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views

Color

Flowers produce color to attract specific pollinators. A red rose absorbs nearly all light below the red wavelengths, appearing intensely red. A yellow rose reflects some blue light, appearing unsaturated yellow. Flowers reflect light within the visible spectrum to attract pollinators, with white flowers reflecting all wavelengths equally. Color allows flowers to target particular pollinators. Unlike printing which uses pigments to divide the spectrum, flowers shift the transition between absorbing and reflecting light, producing color by modifying the reflected wavelength. Most flowers absorb blue to yellow light and reflect green to red light, with the transition point determining their color.

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November Rolf
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Color

See also: Color garden

Reflectance spectra for the flowers of several varieties of rose. A red rose absorbs about 99.7% of light across
a broad area below the red wavelengths of the spectrum, leading to an exceptionally pure red. A yellow rose
will reflect about 5% of blue light, producing an unsaturated yellow (a yellow with a degree of white in it).

Many flowering plants reflect as much light as possible within the range of visible wavelengths of the
pollinator the plant intends to attract. Flowers that reflect the full range of visible light are generally
perceived as white by a human observer. An important feature of white flowers is that they reflect
equally across the visible spectrum. While many flowering plants use white to attract pollinators, the
use of color is also widespread (even within the same species). Color allows a flowering plant to be
more specific about the pollinator it seeks to attract. The color model used by human color
reproduction technology (CMYK) relies on the modulation of pigments that divide the spectrum into
broad areas of absorption. Flowering plants by contrast are able to shift the transition point
wavelength between absorption and reflection. If it is assumed that the visual systems of most
pollinators view the visible spectrum as circular then it may be said that flowering plants produce
color by absorbing the light in one region of the spectrum and reflecting the light in the other region.
With CMYK, color is produced as a function of the amplitude of the broad regions of absorption.
Flowering plants by contrast produce color by modifying the frequency (or rather wavelength) of the
light reflected. Most flowers absorb light in the blue to yellow region of the spectrum and reflect light
from the green to red region of the spectrum. For many species of flowering plant, it is the transition
point that characterizes the color that they produce. Color may be modulated by shifting the
transition point between absorption and reflection and in this way a flowering plant may specify
which pollinator it seeks to attract. Some flowering plants also have a limited ability to modulate
areas of absorption. This is typically not as precise as control over wavelength. Humans observers
will perceive this as degrees of saturation (the amount of white in the color).

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