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Natural resource applications of the phenology data and information housed in the National Phenology Database Erin Posthumus and the Staff of the National Coordinating Office, USA National Phenology Network Phenology Informs Resource Management • Indicator of biological responses to climate change • Informs: • Abundance and distribution of species • Functioning of ecosystems (e.g. carbon cycling) • Ecosystem services (e.g. pollination) Enquist et al. 2014 Int J Biometeorol What is USA-NPN all about… • Advance science • Inform management • Communicate & connect Mean growing season length (d) 2001-2006 Ganguly et al. 2010 Collect • Store • Share phenology data, data products & information USA-NPN Capacity Data Products Non-standard or Historical data National Phenology Database USA-NPN Standard Protocols Types of Phenology Data Collected Activity Reproduction Event Status Status & Abundance Day of year Development • >6M observation records • > 8,000 sites • Primarily 2009-present • >1,000 plant and animal taxa • Standardized protocols (Denny et al., 2014) • QA/QC documented www.nn.usanpn.org OMB Control #: 1028-0103 Quality Assurance/Quality Control Available at www.usanpn.org/pubs/reports Quality Assurance/Quality Control • Volunteers contribute ~$2.5B annually to biodiversity research • Scientific value often under estimated “Good citizen science gets us fine grain, broad extent data we can't collect, or afford to collect, any other way,” - author Julia Parrish Density of phenology records curated by USA-NPN 2009 - May 2015 Data Download Tool www.usanpn.org/results/data Data structure Raw data: Species Lat/Long DOY Year Breaking leaf buds? Acer rubrum 38.76N, 121.8W Jan 31 2015 N Acer rubrum 38.76N, 121.8W Feb 16 2015 N Acer rubrum 38.76N, 121.8W Mar 3 2015 Y Summarized data: Species Lat/Long Year Breaking leaf buds – first Yes Breaking leaf buds – days since last No Acer rubrum 38.76N, 121.8W 2015 Mar 3 15 Data visualization Red maple/Breaking leaf buds (2014) Red maple/Open flowers (2014) From the National Phenology Database Piao et al., 2015 USA-NPN data: • Leaf-out dates • Syringa spp. • 35 sites • 1982-2011 Spring leaf unfolding triggered more by daytime temps than nighttime temps From the National Phenology Database Yue et al., 2015 USA-NPN data: • 52 species • 1,147 sites • 1982-2012 From the National Phenology Database Mazer et al., 2015 USA-NPN data: • 4 species • 2011-2014 • NPS units across CA Planned for spring 2016: • Gridded maps of spring onset based on PRISM (19812014; 4km) • 7-day forecasts for start of spring (2.5 km) • Accumulated temperature maps, anomaly maps How has the arrival of spring changed in natural protected areas? Monahan et al. in prep. Applications: Will spring be extreme relative to other years at a site? Lead time to look out for: • Potential for mismatch between interacting species • Potential impacts to species that visitors focus on (eg, cherry blooms) Alliaria petiolata Photo credit: Jody Shimp, Illinois Department of Natural Resources from Invasive.org. Applications: Invasive species control Applications: Wildfire Season An unusually early and warm spring can mean a more intense fire season Photo credit: Denver Post Applications: Getting professional and citizen observers out at the right time • Catching phenophases of interest • Rare plant monitoring and seed collection Accumulated temperature (GDD) Applications: Mobilizing to protect nut trees Budburst No risk of frost damage Jan 1 Time Image: northernpecans.blogspot.com More risk of frost damage Access those data! Red maple/Breaking leaf buds (2014) Red maple/Open flowers (2014) www.usanpn.org/data/visualizations Research partnerships • We’ll promote your research • Need data? Consider a campaign… Acknowledgements The more than 6,000 dedicated volunteer observers participating in Nature’s Notebook Thank you! Connect with USA-NPN • Sign up for a bimonthly enewsletter for phenology observers • Sign up for a bimonthly e-newsletter for our Partners • Sign up for quarterly enewsletter for FWS staff and Friends group members • Join the Local Phenology Leaders listserv • Find us on Facebook Contact: Erin Posthumus [email protected] 520-621-1670