Advancing spring phenology is a well documented consequence of anthropogenic climate change, but it is not well understood how climate change will affect the variability of phenology year to year. Species' phenological timings reflect the adaptation to a broad suite of abiotic needs (e.g., thermal energy) and biotic interactions (e.g., predation and pollination), and changes in patterns of variability may disrupt those adaptations and interactions. Here, we present a geographically and taxonomically broad analysis of phenological shifts, temperature sensitivity, and changes in interannual variability encompassing nearly 10,000 long-term phenology time series representing more than 1000 species across much of the Northern Hemisphere. We show...
Advances in phenology (the annual timing of species' life-cycles) in response to climate change are ...
Within the last decade the study of phenology has taken on a new legitimacy in the area of climate c...
Global climate change impacts can already be tracked in many physical and biological systems; in par...
Aim In response to recent climate warming, numerous studies have reported an earlier onset of spring...
The seasonal timing of biological events (i.e. phenology) has been frequently observed to shift in r...
The timing of plant and animal life cycle events are changing in response to human-altered climates....
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Species across a wide range of taxa and habitats are shifting phenological events in response to cli...
The impact of climate change, in particular increasing spring temperatures, on life-cycle events of ...
PremiseForecasting how species will respond phenologically to future changes in climate is a major c...
Premise of the study: Numerous long-term studies in seasonal habitats have tracked interannual varia...
With the global change in climate, the Arctic has been pinpointed as the region experiencing the fas...
Forecasting how species and ecosystems will respond to climate change has been a major aim of ecolog...
Advances in phenology (the annual timing of species' life-cycles) in response to climate change are ...
Within the last decade the study of phenology has taken on a new legitimacy in the area of climate c...
Global climate change impacts can already be tracked in many physical and biological systems; in par...
Aim In response to recent climate warming, numerous studies have reported an earlier onset of spring...
The seasonal timing of biological events (i.e. phenology) has been frequently observed to shift in r...
The timing of plant and animal life cycle events are changing in response to human-altered climates....
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Current evidence of phenological responses to recent climate change is substantially biased towards ...
Species across a wide range of taxa and habitats are shifting phenological events in response to cli...
The impact of climate change, in particular increasing spring temperatures, on life-cycle events of ...
PremiseForecasting how species will respond phenologically to future changes in climate is a major c...
Premise of the study: Numerous long-term studies in seasonal habitats have tracked interannual varia...
With the global change in climate, the Arctic has been pinpointed as the region experiencing the fas...
Forecasting how species and ecosystems will respond to climate change has been a major aim of ecolog...
Advances in phenology (the annual timing of species' life-cycles) in response to climate change are ...
Within the last decade the study of phenology has taken on a new legitimacy in the area of climate c...
Global climate change impacts can already be tracked in many physical and biological systems; in par...