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Backyard Gardeners Keep Tabs on Warming

Larry O'Hanlon, Discovery News
 

Feb. 25, 2008 -- Climate scientists are now enlisting gardeners, students and any willing plant or flower lovers to watch for changing timing of spring blooms.

Project BudBurst allows people to enter their backyard spring leaf budding and bloom data into an online database that will help track the changing blooming times of specific types of plants.

Since plants are sensitive to temperature, the data will help track the advance of spring, which has been coming earlier in many places throughout North America. The project also collects historical plant data from gardeners who keep journals and have data from years past.

"This data is fed right into the National Phenology Network," said the project's coordinator, Sandra Henderson of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR).

Phenology is the science of tracking seasonal behaviors in plants and animals. It's an old science, with roots in ancient traditions that are tied to blossoming trees. In Japan and China, for instance, cherry and peach tree blooms signal the time of millennium-old festivals. Already it's been shown that Japan's cherry trees now bloom four days earlier than in the 1950s.

Similar warming trends are underway in North America, and the Project BudBurst will help fill in the details of how dozens of native species are adapting to global warming.

"We intend to collect data for several years," said Kayri Havens, director of plant sciences at the Chicago Botanic Garden, a partner in the project. That way changes in leaf budding and flower blooming ought to be seen over time.

Children are playing a big role in the project, said Henderson, both at home as well as via teachers who are incorporating the project into their regular curriculum.

"We found that really exciting, to reconnect children with the outside world," said Henderson.

"My kids enjoyed it and I think they learned a good deal," said Jenny Whittaker a teacher at St. Monica Academy in Chicago, where she involved students in a pilot version of the project last year. "They picked their trees and we labeled them."

Then the kids made daily visits to their trees, photographing and drawing pictures of the trees as spring awakened them. In fact, it was almost hard to keep the kids away from their trees, she said. The students later compiled their data and presented it to the school.

"The kids are very interested in global warming," Whittaker told Discovery News, "because they hear so much about it in the news."

Anyone can participate in this year's Project BudBurst, said Henderson, by simply visiting the website to learn about native plants in their area. The project commenced on Feb. 15 and within days had more than 400 registered bud watchers.


Related Links:

Larry O'Hanlon's blog: Earth Impacts

Project BudBurst

Treehugger.com

National Phenology Network

More on global warming


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