Hold the tinsel—the rainbow eucalyptus tree doesn"t need decorations to appear festive for the holidays. Its bark displays a palette of bright colors by design. As older layers of bark peel away in strips, new layers packed with green chlorophyll are revealed. These exposed areas eventually transition to hues of blue, purple, and orange as tannins accumulate. The continual peeling allows the tree to shed mosses, lichen, fungi, or parasites along with the bark, while also exposing the chlorophyll underneath, which boosts the tree"s ability to photosynthesize. The bark isn"t the only unusual thing about this species. While most people associate eucalyptus with koalas and Australia, the rainbow eucalyptus is native to the Philippines and Indonesia. It thrives in tropical climates like Hawaii, where our homepage trees were photographed.
Tree of many colors
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
A good time in the Badlands
-
Gespensterwald, Nienhagen, Germany
-
Let’s celebrate
-
A path lain with petals
-
Vieste, Apulia, Italy
-
Río Negro, Amazon basin, Brazil
-
Here we mark the price of freedom
-
Piazza IX Aprile, Taormina, Sicily, Italy
-
Sundance Film Festival
-
The smoke before the bonfire
-
Mount Sopris, Colorado
-
World Children s Day
-
Sleep tight, little hedgehog
-
In the Himalayas for International Mountain Day
-
Take a break! It s Labor Day!
-
A palace for the public
-
Santorini through the clouds
-
Antarctica Day
-
Birds and bees, and why they re so important
-
Not your average sandcastle
-
The story of a rediscovered redwood
-
World Population Day
-
Belted Galloway cows
-
Point Reyes National Seashore, California
-
Plate ice along Lake Superior, Grand Marais, Minnesota
-
Great horned owl fledglings
-
Pups of the prairie
-
Horsetail Fall, Yosemite National Park, California
-
Siblings Day
-
Brotherly cubs
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

