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Explore the many great phenology-related observation programs and organizations.
Image credit:
Abe Miller-Rushing
Our Phenology Friends
PlantWatch is a Canadian program that encourages volunteers of all ages to monitor plants and bloom times as a part of an effort to discover how and why our natural environment is changing.
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The Konza Environmental Education Program (KEEP) began recording phenological events at Konza Prairie in 2001. The data added by volunteers and students becomes part of a long-term data set to show trends and relationships among plants or animals across Kansas.
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A network of citizen scientists is being established in central New York to observe the timing of flowering, leaf development, fruiting, and leaf drop in populations of trees and herbaceous species. This site will help observers to enter their data on the timing of important plant events through the growing season.
Participants make valuable phenological observations for use by educators and scientists interested in understanding the impacts of climate change on plants. Project BudBurst engages individuals in making careful observations of a variety of phenophases including first leaf, first flower, first pollen, first ripe fruit, and leaf color change. Project BudBurst targets 75 plant species but will accept data on any plant species.
Participating youth are citizen scientists who collect data on butterflies to help professional scientists determine the abundance and distribution of butterflies throughout the country. WINGS, Winning Investigative Network for Great Science, is a partnership between 4-H youth and professional scientists, although you do not need to be in 4-H to participate.
A North American survey of the abundance and distribution of birds that visit feeders in winter.
Project Squirrel is a citizen science project for everybody, everywhere that uses squirrels as a catalyst to study urban nature, including people. Whether or not you have squirrels near you, we encourage you to visit our web site once a season to record data about your neighborhood. There are many places that have one species of squirrel, some that have more, and some that have none. However, the number and diversity of squirrels in a given neighborhood often changes over time. We want to find out why. We also want to know how squirrel's perceptions of local habitats vary from those of the resident humans. Log on to Project Squirrel throughout the year to tell us what is going on in the nature of your neighborhood.The observational parts of this study are suitable for all ages and skill levels. For people who want to get more involved we have an experimental food patch study, too.