Extreme weather disrupts nature's timing, affecting plants, insects, and ecosystems by altering phenological patterns.
Spring's arrival across the U.S. has been hit or miss, depending on where you are. Much of this is because of the chaotic ...
The answer is in your yard. Watch closely for the smallest hints, record what you find and advance the cause of science.
Phys.org on MSN13d
The yucca and the moth: How extreme weather impacts the timing of biological eventsRather, they interact with each other and interact with climatic variables in driving the phenology of plants and insects as ...
Data shows that spring has warmed by 1.8C in the UK since 1970 and this warming is having an impact on nature.
More information: Daijiang Li et al, Extreme weather events have strong but different impacts on plant and insect phenology, Nature Climate Change (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-025-02248-7 ...
Data given to BBC Weather by Nature's Calendar, external - a citizen science project by the Woodland Trust - demonstrates that climate change is triggering natural events. Since 2000 they have used ...
Much of phenology is rooted in the seasons ... In a new study published in Nature Climate Change, a team led by University of Arizona ecologist Daijiang Li took a closer look at how extreme ...
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