phenology and the natural world master naturalists name title

85
Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Upload: shavonne-greene

Post on 29-Dec-2015

225 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Phenology and The Natural World

Master Naturalists

Name

Title

Page 2: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Objectives of today’s discussion:

Define phenology and explain its applicability to understanding changes in habitats

Understand the importance of record-keeping.

Understand long-term phenology monitoring. 

Challenge!

Page 3: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Skills you will gain:

Observation

Record-keeping

Species & Life cycle

identification

Page 4: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

What do I KNOW about PHENOLOGY?!What do I WANT TO KNOW?

5 minutes

Opening Activity

Page 5: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencingUsing nature as a guide

Ecosystems, climate & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master Natualists

Next Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 6: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title
Page 7: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

Page 8: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Pho

to C

redi

t: U

.S. F

ish

and

Wil

dlif

e S

ervi

ce S

outh

east

Reg

ion,

vi

a W

ikim

edia

Com

mon

s

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Page 9: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencing

Using nature as a guideEcosystems, climate & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master Naturalists

Next Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 10: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Using nature as a guide

Tradition and Lore

http://www.farmersalmanac.com/full-moon-names/

“Tribes kept track of seasons by giving distinct names to each

recurring full moon.”

November -Beaver Moon

February – Full Worm Moon

May – Full Flower Moon

Phot

o cr

edit:

B. P

owel

l

Photo Credits: Wikimedia Commons unless otherwise noted Photo credit: L. Barnett

September – Harvest Moon

Page 11: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Jeff

erso

n

Powell

Tho

reau

Page 12: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Garden re-created

Photo credit: Monticello

Page 13: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Understanding outdoor recreation schedules

Photo credit: E. Stemmy

• Feeding times• Following

brackish waters• Water

temperature• Spawning times

related to temp - 55° - 68° F in Chesapeake Bay. April peak?

Chesapeake Bay Spring Season for Striped Bass = May 16 – June 16

Page 14: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Acer rubrum (red maple); Photo credit: D. Hartel

Observing the same individual through the seasons

Page 15: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Cloned lilac program

HISTORIC LILAC NETWORK

ESTABLISHED IN THE 1950S

SANTA RITA EXPERIMENTAL

RANGE,GREEN VALLEY, AZ

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Page 16: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

INTRODUCTION to JOURNALING AND OBSERVATION

15-20 minutesOUTDOORS

Activity 2

Page 17: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencing

Using nature as a guide

Ecosystems, climate, & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master Naturalists

Next Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 18: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Ecology

Distrib

ution Abiotic

Biotic

Climate

Abundance

Page 19: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

BIOMES –World’s Major Communities Classified by major vegetation, adaptations to environment

Aquatic

Grassland

Desert

Forest

Tundra

Optimum conditions=NICHE

Page 20: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

WeatherDay-to-day changes in the

Earth’s atmosphere.

Climate is what you expect…

…weather is what you get.-Mark Twain

ClimateLong-term average

of dailyweather in a given

area.

It is about… …time

Page 21: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/phzmweb/

Annual average MINIMUM temperatures – 30 years

Page 22: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Sunset Climate Zones for the WestAlso account for:

• Latitude• Hills and Valleys• Elevation• Ocean influence (humidity)• Continental air• Precipitation • Microclimates

www.sunset.com/garden/climate-zones/

Page 23: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

http://alliance.la.asu.edu/maps/AZ_biomes_web.pdf

Life Zones

Biodiversity

Page 24: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Why is climate important to ecology?

Ecology

Climate drives what occurs where, what lives where, and how those species respond to their enviroment.

Page 25: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

PHENOLOGY

Page 26: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Just to be clear…

phRenology – a pseudoscience

focused on measurements of the human skull and size

of the brain

phOnology – a branch of linguistics

concerned with the organization of sounds in

language

Page 27: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

What is phenology?

The science of the seasons• Blooms and buds• Hibernation, migration,

emergence• Easy to observe

Photo credit: L. Barnett

…it is the study of the timing of recurring plant and animal life-cycle stages, or phenophases, and their relationship to environmental conditions.

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 28: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Who observes phenology?• Scientists

• Gardeners/Agriculturists• Land managers

• Educators• Youth

Photo credit: C. Enquist

Photo credit: P. Warren

Photo credit: S. Schaffer

Page 29: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

PLANT LIFE CYCLE

GREEN GROWTHRequires Optimum Conditions

Page 30: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

PLANT LIFE CYCLE

FLOWER

Requires Optimum Conditions

Page 31: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

PLANT LIFE CYCLE

SET SEED Requires Optimum Conditions

Page 32: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

American kestrelFalco sparverius

Reproduction

©Wikimedia Commons

©Wikimedia Commons

Reproduction

Active

Page 33: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

CompletePupa

INSECT

www.askabiologist.asu.edu

LARVA

PUPA

ADULT

Page 34: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Reproduction Development MethodActivity

ANIMAL >> Mammal, Bird, Snake, Insect

Flowers FruitsLeaves

PLANT

Observable life cycle events orPHENOPHASES

Page 35: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Why are the timing of life-cycleevents important?

• SEASONAL CHANGE

• Species interrelations

Shifting weather and climate affect all of these

Page 36: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

PHENOLOGY

CLIMATE CHANGE

Page 37: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Phenology and Climate ChangeResearch, spring timing and range

A three-way mismatch

English Oak

Winter Moth

Pied Flycatcher Both et al. 2006 Nature

EARLIER

SAME TIME EACH YEAR

EARLIER

Page 38: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title
Page 39: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

www.globalchange.gov

Page 40: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

What to expect :

Drought

Increased heat

Decreased water flow

Rising sea levels

Extreme Events

http://nca2014.globalchange.gov

Possible solutions

Understand Species Response

Mitigation

Adaptation

Page 41: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Climate Change and

Watersheds:

Decreased stream flow

Change in species

Increased nutrient load

http://www.epa.gov/sciencematters/climatechange/ccwatershed.htm

Possible actions

Monitor health of watershed

Mitigation to limit impacts of pollutants

Alternative water supply

Page 42: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Why is a changing climate problematic?

Ecology

CHANGES in:

• Arrival, birth, feeding

• Shifting range boundaries Changing morphology

• Extirpation or Extinction

• Economic impacts

http://www.ipcc.ch/

Page 43: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

10 minutes

Page 44: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencing

Using nature as a guide

Ecosystems, climate, & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master Naturalists

Next Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 45: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

UNDERSTAND HOW SPECIES AND

LANDSCAPES ARE RESPONDING TO CLIMATE

CHANGE.

Primary goal• Create a standardized, long-

term dataset for use in multiple types of research.

Mission• Make phenology data, models

and related information available.

• Encourage people of all ages and backgrounds to observe and record phenology.

Photo credit: C. Enquist

Page 46: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Pho

to c

redi

t: L.

Rom

ano

Page 47: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Plant and animal species = 943 total

3727 observers reporting (11,587 total) making 603,073 observations

13,249 sites, 6404 active sites

As of 9/1/14

Page 48: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Reproduction Development MethodActivity

ANIMAL

Active individuals

Feeding

Male combat Mating

Young individuals

Dead individuals

Individuals at a feeding station

Flowers FruitsLeaves

Young leaves Leaves Colored

leaves

Flowers or flower buds

Open flowers

Ripe fruits Recent

seed or fruit drop

PLANT PHENOPHASES

…How Many?

Page 49: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

YES

NO

?

Page 50: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Leaves

Flowers

Fruits

Gambel Oak

Page 51: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Open flowers : One or more open, fresh flowers are visible on the plant. Flowers are considered "open" when the reproductive parts (male stamens or female pistils) are visible between or within unfolded or open flower parts (petals, floral tubes or sepals). Do not include wilted or dried flowers. For Quercus gambelii, the male flowers will open once the initially compact catkin has unfolded and is hanging loosely' Female flowers are open when the pistils are visible, but will be very difficult to see where they are out of reach’.

Do you see…open flowers?

Photo Credit: Utah State University Extension http://forestry.usu.edu/htm/treeid/oaks/gambel-oak Photo credit: Evelyn Simak via Wikimedia Commons

Page 52: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Do you see…..Flowers or Flower Buds?Less than 3

3 to 10

11 to 100

101 to 1000

1001 to 10,000

More than 10,000

Select the most appropriate binWrite the bin on the line

What percentage of all fresh flowers are open?Less than 5%

5% - 24%

25% - 49%

50% - 74%

75% - 94%

95% or more

Select the most appropriate binWrite the bin on the line

Page 53: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Acorn Woodpecker

Photo from All About Birds

Page 54: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Breaking leaf buds

Leaves

Increasing leaf size Colored leaves

Flowers or Flower Buds

Open Flowers

Fruits

Ripe Fruits

Recent fruit or seed drop

DECIDUOUS PLANT PHENOPHASES

Page 55: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Breaking leaf buds

Leaves

Increasing leaf size Colored leaves

Flowers or Flower Buds

Open Flowers

Fruits

Ripe Fruits

Recent fruit or seed drop

DECIDUOUS PLANT PHENOPHASES

Page 56: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

UNDERSTANDING PHENOPHASEDEFINITIONS

20 minutes INSIDE

Activity 3

Page 57: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

After reviewing the definitions, discuss:

1. Something that you have seen before, or

is familiar

2. Something that is confusing

3. Something you’d like to understand better

Activity 3

Page 58: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Data IN

Page 59: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Enter Observations Online

Photo credit: S. Schaffer

Page 60: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

You MUST have your account completely set up online first to use the mobile apps!

Page 61: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Data OUT

Page 62: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Red maple (Acer rubrum) in 2013

collected via Nature’s Notebook

http://www.usanpn.org/data/visualizations

DATA DOWNLOAD

Page 63: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

1. Data for Creosote in 2012 vs. 20132. Data for Ocotillo in 2013

Dark Grey = no dataLight Grey=User entered “no”Color corresponds to phenophase

Page 64: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

https://www.usanpn.org/results/data

DATA DOWNLOAD

Page 65: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

RESULTS

Page 66: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

2012. Primack, R. B, Miller-Rushing, A.J

7 day average

61 years

2-3 week average

1999. Bradley, N.L., Leopold, C.A., Ross, J., Huffacker, W.

Sandhill crane and geese

Page 67: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Nature's Notebook data on flowering of 6 species of deciduous trees and eBird (Cornell Lab of Ornithology 2012, ebird.org) data on a long-distance migratory bird, the Tennessee warbler

Interannual patterns of phenological synchrony and overlap

Page 68: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Fall Webworm phenology

• Timing – Fall

• IPM, natural

Page 69: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

"Snowman on frozen lake" by Petritap - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons @ Wikimedia Commons.

"Spring in Somerville, NJ - 2012 File 3" by Siddharth Mallya - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons @ Wikimedia Commons

"Owoce wisni" by Nova - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons @ Wikimedia Commons By Hans [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

Page 70: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencing

Using nature as a guide

Ecosystems, climate, & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master NaturalistsNext Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 71: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Education

Page 72: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Citizen Science

Page 73: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Stewardship

Page 74: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Page 75: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Record keeping

Consistent protocols

Useable, scale-able

Citizen science

Data output

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Page 76: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: T. Brown via Wikimedia Commons

Photo credit: Britton, N.L., and A. Brown., NRCS Plants B

Eur

asi

an

wa

term

ilfoi

l

Photo credit: Hans Hillewaert via Wikimedia Commons

Water Hyacinth

American bullfrog

Page 77: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: L. Barnett

www.CoCoRaHS.org

Page 78: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

DATA COLLECTION 30 minutes - OUTSIDE

Activity 4

Page 79: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

DATA ENTRY20 minutes - INSIDE

Activity 5

Page 80: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: P. Warren

Observing is experiencing

Using nature as a guide

Ecosystems, climate, & phenology

USA National Phenology Network

Master Naturalists

Next Steps

Photo credit: E. Alderson Photo credit: B. Powell Photo credit: B. Powell

Photo credit: P. Warren

Page 81: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: L. Barnett

LONG-TERM PROGRAM PLANNING

Page 82: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Phenology

Plant & People

Connections Local Ecology & Biodiversity

HabitatsClimate & Weather

Page 83: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

Photo credit: L. Barnett

Design a PHENOLOGY PROGRAM

• What is your science question?• What outcomes, short and long term, do

you want to achieve?• What are the activities you can do?• What are the resources you already

have?• Who would be potential partners?

Page 84: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

When are mesquite beans

ready for harvest?

Volunteer Groups

Local Partners

Page 85: Phenology and The Natural World Master Naturalists Name Title

You’re invited to

connect with USA-NPN…

• Sign up for a phenology e-newsletter (quarterly)

• Join the Nature’s Notebook community and become an observer: Contribute to science while having fun!

• Discover new tools and resources LoriAnne Barnett

[email protected]@loriannebarnett