The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric across seasons – where winter non-growing seasons will warm more than summer growing seasons. Asymmetric winter warming in temperature-sensitive ecosystems may delay spring phenological events by reducing the opportunity that a plants’ chilling requirement is met. Similarly, symmetric warming can advance spring phenology. To explore the impact of asymmetric warming on plant phenology, we applied a year-round warming and a winter warming treatment to our experimental plots. Over a two-year period, we monitored leaf-out and flowering phenology for 11 plant species. There was variation among species, however, both winter and...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
Shifts in plant species phenology (the timing of life-history events such as flowering) have been ob...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
Although there is abundant evidence that plant phenology is shifting with climatic warming, the magn...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
Phenological shifts, changes in the seasonal timing of life cycle events, are among the best documen...
Phenological modification is one of the most serious effects of global warming on ecosystems with cl...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Premise of the Study: Changes to plant phenology have been linked to warmer temperatures caused by c...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
Shifts in plant species phenology (the timing of life-history events such as flowering) have been ob...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
Although there is abundant evidence that plant phenology is shifting with climatic warming, the magn...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
Phenological shifts, changes in the seasonal timing of life cycle events, are among the best documen...
Phenological modification is one of the most serious effects of global warming on ecosystems with cl...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Premise of the Study: Changes to plant phenology have been linked to warmer temperatures caused by c...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...
Shifts in plant species phenology (the timing of life-history events such as flowering) have been ob...
Mountains have been warming faster than lower elevation ecosystems, and because of tight coupling be...