Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs

ABSTRACT As plants continue to respond to global warming with phenological shifts, our understanding of the importance of short‐lived heat events and seasonal weather cues has lagged relative to our understanding of plant responses to broad shifts in mean climate conditions. Here, we explore the imp...

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Main Authors: Chelsea N. Miller, Katharine L. Stuble
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70700
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author Chelsea N. Miller
Katharine L. Stuble
author_facet Chelsea N. Miller
Katharine L. Stuble
author_sort Chelsea N. Miller
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT As plants continue to respond to global warming with phenological shifts, our understanding of the importance of short‐lived heat events and seasonal weather cues has lagged relative to our understanding of plant responses to broad shifts in mean climate conditions. Here, we explore the importance of warmer‐than‐average days in driving shifts in phenophase duration for spring‐flowering woodland herbs across one growing season. We harnessed the combined power of community science and public gardens, engaging more than 30 volunteers to monitor shifts in phenology (documenting movement from one phenophase to the next) for 198 individual plants of 14 species twice per week for the 2023 growing season (March—October) across five botanic gardens in the midwestern and southeastern US. Gardens included the Holden Arboretum, Kirtland, OH; Dawes Arboretum, Newark, OH; Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, IL; Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO; and Huntsville Botanical Garden, Huntsville, AL. We tested: (1) that higher‐than‐average daily temperatures (deviation from 30‐year historical mean daily temperatures for each location) would be related to truncated phenophase durations; and (2) that phenophase durations would vary among species. Our findings support both hypotheses. We documented significant inverse relationships between positive deviations in daily temperature from historic means (e.g., warmer‐than‐average days) and durations of three reproductive phenophases: “First Bud,” “First Ripe Fruit,” and “Early Fruiting.” Similar (non‐significant) trends were noted for several other early‐season phenophases. Additionally, significant differences in mean phenophase durations were detected among the different species, although these differences were inconsistent across plant parts (vegetative, flowering, and fruiting). Results underscore the potential sensitivity of understory herb reproductive phenophases to warmer‐than‐average daily temperatures early in the growing season, contributing to our understanding of phenological responses to short‐term heat events and seasonal weather cues.
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spelling doaj-art-19ed903a18f04edbb6f6fc08090a87ca2025-08-20T02:56:02ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582024-12-011412n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70700Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest HerbsChelsea N. Miller0Katharine L. Stuble1Holden Arboretum Kirtland Ohio USAHolden Arboretum Kirtland Ohio USAABSTRACT As plants continue to respond to global warming with phenological shifts, our understanding of the importance of short‐lived heat events and seasonal weather cues has lagged relative to our understanding of plant responses to broad shifts in mean climate conditions. Here, we explore the importance of warmer‐than‐average days in driving shifts in phenophase duration for spring‐flowering woodland herbs across one growing season. We harnessed the combined power of community science and public gardens, engaging more than 30 volunteers to monitor shifts in phenology (documenting movement from one phenophase to the next) for 198 individual plants of 14 species twice per week for the 2023 growing season (March—October) across five botanic gardens in the midwestern and southeastern US. Gardens included the Holden Arboretum, Kirtland, OH; Dawes Arboretum, Newark, OH; Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, IL; Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO; and Huntsville Botanical Garden, Huntsville, AL. We tested: (1) that higher‐than‐average daily temperatures (deviation from 30‐year historical mean daily temperatures for each location) would be related to truncated phenophase durations; and (2) that phenophase durations would vary among species. Our findings support both hypotheses. We documented significant inverse relationships between positive deviations in daily temperature from historic means (e.g., warmer‐than‐average days) and durations of three reproductive phenophases: “First Bud,” “First Ripe Fruit,” and “Early Fruiting.” Similar (non‐significant) trends were noted for several other early‐season phenophases. Additionally, significant differences in mean phenophase durations were detected among the different species, although these differences were inconsistent across plant parts (vegetative, flowering, and fruiting). Results underscore the potential sensitivity of understory herb reproductive phenophases to warmer‐than‐average daily temperatures early in the growing season, contributing to our understanding of phenological responses to short‐term heat events and seasonal weather cues.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70700arboretabotanical gardenshistorical climatephenologyspring ephemeralstemperature normals
spellingShingle Chelsea N. Miller
Katharine L. Stuble
Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
Ecology and Evolution
arboreta
botanical gardens
historical climate
phenology
spring ephemerals
temperature normals
title Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
title_full Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
title_fullStr Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
title_full_unstemmed Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
title_short Warm Spring Days are Related to Shorter Durations of Reproductive Phenophases for Understory Forest Herbs
title_sort warm spring days are related to shorter durations of reproductive phenophases for understory forest herbs
topic arboreta
botanical gardens
historical climate
phenology
spring ephemerals
temperature normals
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70700
work_keys_str_mv AT chelseanmiller warmspringdaysarerelatedtoshorterdurationsofreproductivephenophasesforunderstoryforestherbs
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