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Jake F. Weltzin, Kathryn Thomas, Brian Haggerty, Theresa Crimmins, Ellen Denny, Abe Miller-Rushing, Alyssa Rosemartin www.usanpn.org The USA National Phenology Network: A Practical Tool for Research, Management and Education in the Face of Climate Change

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The USA National Phenology Network: A Practical Tool for Research, Management and Education in the Face of Climate Change. Jake F. Weltzin, Kathryn Thomas, Brian Haggerty, Theresa Crimmins, Ellen Denny, Abe Miller-Rushing, Alyssa Rosemartin. www.usanpn.org. Agenda. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Jake F. Weltzin, Kathryn Thomas, Brian Haggerty, Theresa Crimmins, Ellen Denny,

Abe Miller-Rushing, Alyssa Rosemartin

www.usanpn.org

The USA National Phenology Network:

A Practical Tool for Research, Management and Education in the

Face of Climate Change

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Agenda

• Introduction to USA-NPN and overview of applications (11:30-12)

• Applications break-out groups (12-1:15)

– Research (Kathryn Thomas)– Decision support (Jake Weltzin)– Education (Brian Haggerty)

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology Network?• Applications for research programs & historic

datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• Using the USA-NPN data entry interface

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Cause and consequence of seasonal biological events

Phenology

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“Phenology…is perhaps the simplest process in which to track changes in the ecology of species

in response to climate change.” (IPCC 2007)

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Changes in spring timing for many organisms

Parmesan and Yohe 2003 Nature

Parmesan and Yohe

• Meta-analysis

• 677 species examined

• 16-132 years (med = 45)

• 62% advanced in timingCamille Parmesan

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Response depends on the type of organism

Parmesan 2007 GCB

-10

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

Ch

ang

e in

sp

ring

tim

ing

(d

ays/

de

cad

e)

N = 203

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English Oak

Winter Moth

Pied Flycatcher Both et al. 2006 Nature

EARLIER

SAME TIME EACH YEAR

EARLIER

A three-way mismatch

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology

Network?• Applications for research programs & historic

datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• Using the USA-NPN data entry interface

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A new data resource—a national network of integrated phenological observations across space and time

• Understand how plants, animals and landscapes respond to environmental variation and climate change

• Develop decision-support tools and techniques to facilitate human adaptation to climate change

• Engage the public in scientific discovery and increase the understanding of the changing natural world through phenology monitoring

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• National-scale science and monitoring initiative

• Agencies, NGOs, academia, the public

• Integrates with other science/monitoring networks

• Target: 100,000 observation locations

• Plants + animals; contemporary + legacy data

• Education & outreach

• Integration across spatial and temporal scales

NPN in a nutshell

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Native American

Tribes

Native American

Tribes

ScientistsScientistsSpecializedNetworks

SpecializedNetworks

PublicAgencies

PublicAgencies

NGOsNGOs

Educators

Educators

CitizenScientists

CitizenScientists National

Coordinating Office

Information ManagementMonitoring Programs

CommunicationsResource ManagersResource Managers

Services for stakeholders

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology Network?• Applications for research programs &

historic datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• Using the USA-NPN data entry interface

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• Henry David Thoreau, Walden Pond, Concord, MA

- 600 plant species, first flowering, 8 years, 1850s

• Richard Primack & Abe Miller-Rushing, Concord, MA

- 42 plant species, first flowering, 4 years, 2004-2007

- Average flowering date: 7 days earlier

- Culprit: rising winter and spring temperatures

Thoreau on Walden Pond

Rich Hank Abe

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https://www.pwrc.usgs.gov/bpp/

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology Network?• Applications for research programs & historic

datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• How to use the USA-NPN data entry interface

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• Predictive services: fire, invasions, dust, runoff

• Health: allergies, disease

• Natural resources: management, migrations, pests

• Conservation: mutualisms, reserve planning

• Agriculture: plant & animal production, biocontrol

• Ecosystem services: carbon, water & nutrient dynamics

• Recreation: hunting, leaf-peeping, bird-watching

Management & Decision Support Applications

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Local extinctions in Concord, MA Willis et al. 2008 PNAS

Change in phenology

Dec

line

in p

opul

atio

n

asters, bladderworts, buttercups, dogwoods, lilies,

mints, orchids, violets

What’s declining?

Vulnerability assessments

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology Network?• Applications for research programs & historic

datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• Using the USA-NPN data entry interface

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http://www.usanpn.org/?q=educators_clearinghouse

Educator’s Clearinghouse

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The Phenology Handbook can be tailored for a variety of audiences

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• Great introduction to phenology monitoring

• Engage public in global change data collection

• Educational materials on-line

• Observations for any plant species

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Outline

• What is phenology & why does it matter?• What is the USA National Phenology Network?• Applications for research programs & historic

datasets• Applications for management & decision

support• Applications for education programs• Using the USA-NPN data entry interface

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USA-NPN Information Management System

Decision- support

Research

Education

Search

Synthesis

Visualizations

Work platform

Datasets

Products

Data

Contemp-orary

Legacy

Partners

Ancillary

Data curation

User interface

Databasesystem

Metadata

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215 plant species

• Search by state or partner

• Calibration Species

• Cloned Plant Project Species

http://www.usanpn.org/?q=species_search

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1. Review site & species selection

guidelines

2. Select plants to monitor

3. Register yourself

4. Register your site

5. Register your individual plants

6. Get instructions & data sheets

7. Make & record observations

8. Report observations online

http://www.usanpn.org/?q=guidelines

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www.usanpn.org

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Register your site

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Register your plants

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1. Research (Kathryn Thomas)

2. Decision support and management (Jake Weltzin)

3. Education (Brian Haggerty)

Break-out groups