Changes in snowmelt date and summer precipitation affect the flowering phenology of <i>Erythronium grandiflorum</i> (Glacier Lily; Liliaceae)
Abstract
• Premise of the study: Climate change has affected species worldwide, including alterations in phenology, migration patterns, distribution, and survival. Because Erythronium grandiflorum is an early‐season bloomer, alterations in its phenology may have serious implications for many North American Rocky Mountain communities, including changes in resource availability for pollinators and herbivores.• Methods: We investigated whether changes in the snowmelt date, summer temperature, and summer precipitation have altered the timing and abundance of flowering in E. grandiflorum by collecting long‐term data on floral abundance from 1975–2008 in a series of 2 × 2 m plots at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory (RMBL) in Gothic, Colorado in the United States.• Key results: Snowmelt date and mean summer temperature were negatively correlated. Over the 30‐yr study, the snowmelt date advanced by 4.14 d/decade, and mean summer temperature increased by 0.38°C/decade. Summer precipitation was variable, showing no change. The first, peak, and last flowering dates of E. grandiflorum advanced an average of 3.2 d/decade. Furthermore, earlier snowmelt and greater summer precipitation in the previous year led to earlier flowering in E. grandiflorum. There was no change in flowering abundance in this species, indicating it may be controlled by a complex set of abiotic and biotic variables.• Conclusions: Our study indicates that snowmelt is arriving earlier at the RMBL, which has caused earlier flowering in E. grandiflorum. Because alterations in phenology can disrupt important ecological interactions, information on potential phenological shifts in species that interact with E. grandiflorum is essential in determining the net effect of climate‐driven alterations in phenology.
Local Knowledge Graph (19 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Variation in the impact of climate change on flowering phenology and abundance: an examination of two pairs of closely related wildflower species
Effects of climate change on phenology, frost damage, and floral abundance of montane wildflowers
Effects of snowpack on the timing and abundance of flowering in Delphinium nelsonii: implications for climate change
Data from: The individual and combined effects of snowmelt timing and frost exposure on the reproductive success of montane forbs
Early snowmelt and warming experiments to study plant phenology
Phenological responses to multiple environmental drivers under climate change: insights from a long-term observational study and a manipulative field experiment
Colorado?s Alpine Ecosystem Health ? A Case Study on San Juan, Sawatch, and West Elk Mountains
Native Plant Revegetation Guide for Colorado
Sudden Aspen Decline in Colorado
Cited By (108 times, 25 in Knowledge Hub)
Solitary bee genera differ in foraging activity timing and temperature; Evidence of a seasonal dietary shift in Hoplitis fulgida
Legume germination is delayed in dry soils and in sterile soils devoid of microbial mutualists: Species-specific implications for upward range expansions
The Effect of Snowmelt Timing on Pollinator Visitation to Subalpine Wildflowers
Global Warming, Advancing Bloom and Evidence for Pollinator Plasticity from Long-Term Bee Emergence Monitoring
Snow melt timing acts independently and in conjunction with temperature accumulation to drive subalpine plant phenology
From the ground up: Building predictions for how climate change will affect belowground mutualisms, floral traits, and bee behavior
Investigating the relationship between <i> Bombus appositus </i> abundance and its overlap with key floral resources
The individual and combined effects of snowmelt timing and frost exposure on the reproductive success of montane forbs
Climate change, phenological shifts, and species interactions: Case studies in subalpine plant and migratory fish populations
Effects of Climate Change on Plants, Pollinators and Their Interactions
Interannual bumble bee abundance is driven by indirect climate effects on floral resource phenology
Effects of climate change on phenologies and distributions of bumble bees and the plants they visit
Turnover and reliability of flower communities in extreme environments: Insights from long-term phenology data sets
Does snowmelt timing affect bumble bee colony abundance?
The evolution of quantitative traits in complex environments
Changes in ant community composition caused by 20 years of experimental warming vs.13 years of natural climate shift
Climate change and the conservation of marmots
Long-term trends mask variation in the direction and magnitude of short-term phenological shifts
Effects of climate change on mast-flowering cues in a clonal montane herb, <i>Veratrum tenuipetalum</i> (Melanthiaceae)
Maintenance of temporal synchrony between syrphid flies and floral resources despite differential phenological responses to climate
Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science
Phenotypic plasticity and adaptive evolution contribute to advancing flowering phenology in response to climate change
A single climate driver has direct and indirect effects on insect population dynamics
Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early season nectar resources
Plant–Pollinator interactions in a changing climate
References (41)
10 in Knowledge Hub, 31 external
