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Jake F. Weltzin US Geological Survey Alyssa Rosemartin University of Arizona www.usanpn.org The USA National Phenology Network A Practical Tool for Conservation and Education in the Face of Climate Change
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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“Phenology…is perhaps the simplest process in which to track changes in the ecology of species in response to climate change.” (IPCC 2007)
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Easy to observe Sensitive to environmental variation Scales from 'leaf to globe' Linked to most aspects of ecosystems
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A new data resource—a national network of integrated phenological observations across space and time Key Goal Understand how plants, animals and landscapes respond to environmental variation and climate change
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Key sponsors and collaborators… The Great Sunflower Project
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A national biological science and monitoring program Agencies, NGOs, academia, the public Standard protocols for plants, animals & landscapes Facilitate scaling from 'leaf to globe' Integrate with other monitoring networks Business to Business and Business to Customer USA-NPN in a nutshell
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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Develop a national phenology information management system Develop partnerships for implementation Facilitate phenology science and research Facilitate development of decision support tools Conduct and facilitate education and outreach Develop a national phenology monitoring system Core functions
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Information management Decision- support Research Education Search Synthesis Visualizations Work platform Datasets Products NCO Information Management System Data Contemp- orary Legacy Partners Ancillary Data curation User interface Databases National Phenology Network Metadata
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Native American Tribes Scientists Specialized Networks Specialized Networks Public Agencies Public Agencies NGOs Educators Citizen Scientists Citizen Scientists National Coordinating Office Information Management Monitoring Programs Communications Resource Managers Partnerships and services
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Science and Research Willis et al. 2008 PNAS Moller et al. 2008 PNAS Willis et al. 2010 PLOS Biology Hulme 2010 New Phyt. Change in phenology Populations & Distributions 0 + Increasing Decreasing Predicting vulnerability, invasions and distributions
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Science Predictive services Health Resource mgmt Conservation Agriculture Ecosystem services Recreation Applications and decision-support tools
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Education and outreach for K-Gray Steve Ringman, The Seattle Times Ross Franklin, AP
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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A national phenology monitoring system www.usanpn.org/how-observe
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Real time data available soon
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www.usanpn.org/node/add/ct-dataset Data set registry tool
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www.usanpn.org/results/dataset-list Phenology dataset search tool
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Educator’s Clearinghouse www.usanpn.org/education/clearinghouse
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Phenology publications www.usanpn.org/resources/biblio
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Partnership tool www.usanpn.org/participate/new-partners
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Training resources www.usanpn.org/resources/resources
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Learn about other phenology programs www.usanpn.org/participate/other-programs
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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Event ActivityReproductionDevelopment Day of year Phenology Monitoring Methods Status & Abundance Status
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Event –When did you hear the first frog call? (date) Status –Do you hear a frog calling? (Y N ?) Status & Abundance –Do you hear a frog calling? (Y N ?) –If Y, are they –Non-overlapping calls? –Overlapping with distinguishable individuals? –A full chorus—constant, overlapping calls? Alternate Monitoring Methods e.g., frog-calling
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Event Day of year Event vs Status Monitoring e.g., frog calling Y Status NNNN??NNNYNNNYYYYYNN
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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253+ plant species 58+ animal species Core status monitoring protocols Species on demand Abundance reporting User profiles a project of the USA-NPN
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Cumulative Participants across the nation
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Data reporting in 2010 similar to 2009 3K participants; website: 67K visitors, 100K visits, 500K pageviews
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2010
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Identify & Register a Site Select Plants & Animals –Animal Checklist –Register Individual Plants Make Observations in the Field Submit Observations Online a project of the USA-NPN
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A site is: The area within which you’ll look for your animal species The area which encompasses any plants you plan to observe 37 a project of the USA-NPN
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Convenience Representative location Uniform habitat Appropriate size Proper permission Site Selection Guidelines 38 a project of the USA-NPN
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Overview Identify & Register a Site Select Plants & Animals –Animal Checklist –Register Individual Plants Make Observations in the Field Submit Observations
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41 Animals: create a checklist for your site, look and listen for all species each time you visit Plants: repeat observations of the same individual plants a project of the USA-NPN
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42 a project of the USA-NPN
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Identify & Register a Site Select Plants & Animals –Create Animal Checklist –Register Individual Plants Make Observations in the Field Submit Observations a project of the USA-NPN
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46 Compare phenophases to what you observe. a project of the USA-NPN
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Yes (Y) – if the phenophase is occurring No (N) – if the phenophase is not occurring Unknown (?) – if you did not or forgot to look for signs of this phenophase or not certain you heard or saw that animal species 47 a project of the USA-NPN
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An example: Site: your front yard Species on your animal checklist: –American robin –Black-capped chickadee –Bumblebee Plants registered: –One individual mayapple plant 48 a project of the USA-NPN
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On your site visit, you stand in one place and observe: A bumblebee visiting flowers One robin perched and singing You also make observations of your mayapple plant 49
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50 5/5/10 Robin Black-capped chickadee Bumblebee
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51 American robin My front yard 5/5/10 2010
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52 Bumblebee My front yard 5/5/10 2010
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53 a project of the USA-NPN
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54 Mayapple Mayapple-front yard 5/5/10
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55 Mayapple Mayapple-front yard 5/5/10
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Walking a single line through site Stationary at a single point Area search: multiple passes through site 57 Observing animals
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58 My front yard2010USA-NPN Fan 4/1/104/3/104/9/104/11/104/15/10 15 181915 22222 55555
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Identify & Register a Site Select Plants & Animals –Animal Checklist –Register Individual Plants Make Observations in the Field Submit Observations Online a project of the USA-NPN
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www.usanpn.org
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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Outline Introduction to USA-NPN Core functions Web-based tools and services Phenology monitoring methods Nature's Notebook Field adventure! Break-out groups –Research –Management and decision-support –Education and outreach
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Extra slides below here.
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Standardized, vetted, transparent definitions Species descriptions & profiles Clear data entry interface Absence data + sampling intensity, method, effort Site, organism and observation level metadata Training materials and user support Quality Assurance
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