[Pollinator] USGS News Release: Taking the Pulse of our Planet: Volunteers Needed to Track Seasonal Signs of Climate Change
Catherine E Puckett
cpuckett at usgs.gov
Wed Mar 4 10:29:08 PST 2009
Hi: Can you please put this press release out on your listserver? David
Inouye is a board member of the USA-NPN, and in a year, this group will be
incorporating the tracking of phenological cycles of some pollinators into
the network. Many thanks -- Catherine
News Release
March 3, 2009
Jake Weltzin
520-401-4932
weltzin at usgs.gov
Abraham Miller-Rushing
617-875-7847
abe at wildlife.org
Catherine Puckett
352-264-3532
cpuckett at usgs.gov
Taking the Pulse of our Planet: Volunteers Needed to Track Seasonal Signs
of Climate Change
Hear Related Podcast, "Help Us Keep an Eye on Climate Change," at
http://www.usgs.gov/corecast/
Volunteers across the nation are being recruited to get outdoors and help
track the effects of climate on seasonal changes in plant and animal
behavior.
The USA-National Phenology Network (USA-NPN), a consortium of government,
academic and citizen-scientists, is launching a new national program built
on volunteer observations of flowering, fruiting and other seasonal
events. Scientists and resource managers will use these observations to
track effects of climate change on the Earth's life-support systems.
"This program is designed for people interested in participating in
climate change science, not just reading about it," said USA-NPN Executive
Director and U.S. Geological Survey scientist Jake Weltzin. "We encourage
everyone to visit the USA National Phenology Network Web site and then go
outside and observe the marvelous cycles of plant and animal life."
Phenology is the study of the seasonal cycles of plant and animals, such
as plants sprouting, flowering and fruiting, and animals reproducing,
migrating and hibernating. Changes in these patterns, caused by climate
change or other factors, can significantly affect human economies and
health. In some areas, such changes have already imperiled species, such
as in the disappearance of some wildflowers from near Walden Pond, home of
the famed 19th-century naturalist Henry David Thoreau.
The USA-NPN monitoring program harnesses the power of people and the
Internet to vastly increase the data available to scientists and the
public alike, Weltzin said. The program provides easy-to-use methods to
track the life cycles of nearly 200 species of plants, and will begin
monitoring animals next year.
Mark D. Schwartz, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and
chair of the USA-NPN board of directors, said monitoring changes in
seasonal events across large areas helps researchers forecast the effects
of global climate change on plants, animals, and ecosystems.
Among other uses, data collected by USA-NPN will help resource managers
predict wildfires and pollen production, detect and control invasive
species, monitor droughts, and assess the vulnerability of various plant
and animal species to climate change.
The USA-NPN, based at The University of Arizona in Tucson, is built upon
partnerships among citizen scientists, government agencies, nongovernment
organizations, academic researchers, educators and the public. The rapidly
expanding network includes collaborations among the U.S. Geological
Survey, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, The University of Arizona, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, and The Wildlife Society. Project BudBurst, a
major partner of the USA-NPN, is launching its second season of plant
phenology monitoring.
Arizona saguaro will be one of the species looked at by USA-NPN
volunteers. Photo by Bob Szaro, USGS
USGS provides science for a changing world. For more information, visit
www.usgs.gov.
Subscribe to USGS News Releases via our electronic mailing list or RSS
feed.
**** www.usgs.gov ****
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