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Earlier plant flowering in spring as a response to global warming in the Washington, DC, area
Evidence for global warming is inferred from spring advances in first-flowering in plants. The trend of average first-flowering times per year for the study group shows a significant advance of 2.4 days over a 30-year period. When 11 species that exhibit later first-flowering times are excluded from...
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Published in: | Biodiversity and conservation 2001-04, Vol.10 (4), p.597-612 |
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creator | Abu-Asab, Mones S. Peterson, Paul M. Shetler, Stanwyn G. Orli, Sylvia S. |
description | Evidence for global warming is inferred from spring advances in first-flowering in plants. The trend of average first-flowering times per year for the study group shows a significant advance of 2.4 days over a 30-year period. When 11 species that exhibit later first-flowering times are excluded from the data set, the remaining 89 show a significant advance of 4.5 days. Significant trends for earlier-flowering species range from -3.2 to -46 days, while those for later-flowering species range from +3.1 to +10.4 days. Advances of first-flowering in these 89 species are directly correlated with local increase in minimum temperature (T^sub min^).[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
doi_str_mv | 10.1023/A:1016667125469 |
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subjects | Climate change Conservation biology Flowering plants Global warming Plant ecology Temperature USA, District of Columbia |
title | Earlier plant flowering in spring as a response to global warming in the Washington, DC, area |
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