Study of the Seasons: Phenology at the NRS

Sedgwick training California Phenology ProjectDocents at Sedg­wick Reserve learn to iden­tify the life cycle stages of an oak. Image credit: Brian Haggerty

Nature cel­e­brates the sea­sons with unmis­tak­able changes. In Cal­i­for­nia, rhodo­den­drons add bursts of pink to coastal forests, bare buck­eye branches grow leaf buds, and great egrets gather to nest in tall trees. In autumn, quak­ing aspens turn from green to gold, toyon pro­duce bun­dles of berry­like fruits, and snow geese col­lect by the hun­dreds of thou­sands in Sacra­mento Val­ley wetlands.

Each of these events is influ­enced by cli­mate. Fac­tors such as tem­per­a­ture, rain­fall, and rates of snowmelt help dic­tate when plants set seed and but­ter­flies lay eggs but also how intense the wild­flower bloom will be.

CA phenology project forbs formThe con­di­tion of each mon­i­tored plant is noted and later entered into a cen­tral data­base. Image credit: Kath­leen Wong

Nowa­days, observ­ing nature’s sea­sonal events is a seri­ous sci­ence. Called phe­nol­ogy, the study of recur­ring bio­log­i­cal changes and their responses to the envi­ron­ment can answer a host of press­ing eco­log­i­cal ques­tions. Chief among these: how is cli­mate change affect­ing nat­ural communities?

The answers have major impli­ca­tions for both nature and peo­ple. War­blers that migrate ear­lier than insects hatch could starve. Rodents that require colder con­di­tions could shift their ranges ups­lope. Flow­ers that bloom before bees emerge might never get pol­li­nated. Chang­ing weather pat­terns could accel­er­ate crop plant­ing and har­vest­ing, as well as allergy and fire sea­sons. Con­serv­ing par­tic­u­lar species or com­mu­ni­ties in a chang­ing cli­mate will require shifts in land man­age­ment or restora­tion practices.

To keep tabs on nat­ural sched­ules in Cal­i­for­nia, researchers at UC Santa Bar­bara have launched the Cal­i­for­nia Phe­nol­ogy Project. Led by Pro­fes­sor of Ecol­ogy and Evo­lu­tion­ary Biol­ogy Susan Mazer, grad­u­ate stu­dent Brian Hag­gerty, and post­doc­toral fel­low Eliz­a­beth Math­ews, the project is observ­ing plants at eight UC Nat­ural Reserves and seven national parks, a total of more than 100 mon­i­tor­ing sites.

Sedgwick docents gather for phenology trainingThe Cal­i­for­nia Phe­nol­ogy Project will mon­i­tor the dates of leaf out, flow­er­ing, fruit­ing, and sim­i­lar events for plants at eight NRS reserves. Image credit: Brian Haggerty

Sci­en­tists, docents, staff, teach­ers, and other cit­i­zen sci­en­tists are being trained to track the life stages of sev­eral selected plant species found at each site. Thirty plant species are being tar­geted statewide. The data are then sub­mit­ted online to the USA National Phe­nol­ogy Net­work, which makes phe­nol­ogy data from across the coun­try avail­able for edu­ca­tion and analy­sis. The Cal­i­for­nia project has already sub­mit­ted more than 150,000 obser­va­tions to the national data­base since 2011.

The state project began in 2010, when the National Park Ser­vice funded a pilot mon­i­tor­ing pro­gram in seven parks across the state. The UCSB sci­en­tists devel­oped pro­to­cols, selected tar­get species, devel­oped plant iden­ti­fi­ca­tion mate­ri­als, and trained peo­ple to doc­u­ment events such as flower matu­rity and fruit set.

The project expanded to the NRS in 2011 with a $32,000 Research Oppor­tu­nity Award from UC Vice Pres­i­dent for Research Steven Beck­with. Together with $8,000 in match­ing funds from the UCSB Office of Research, this fund­ing pro­vided train­ing and coor­di­na­tion efforts at eight NRS sites.

Carpin­te­ria Salt Marsh Reserve
Coal Oil Point Reserve
Hast­ings Nat­ural His­tory Reservation
Ken­neth S. Nor­ris Ran­cho Marino Reserve
Sedg­wick Reserve
Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory
Stunt Ranch Santa Mon­ica Moun­tains Reserve
Valen­tine Camp

The Cal­i­for­nia Phe­nol­ogy Project will mon­i­tor plant phases at eight NRS reserves.

The UCOP fund­ing has been absolutely crit­i­cal to this project; with­out it we would not be coor­di­nat­ing the first multi-reserve sci­ence and edu­ca­tion project in the NRS’s 47-year his­tory,” Hag­gerty says.

The project was a plus for the the NRS long before plant mon­i­tor­ing began. In order to pin­point the plant species found at each reserve, and decide which to mon­i­tor, the sci­en­tists had to com­pile a plant list for the entire NRS. The result­ing NRS flora was the first time such a list was assem­bled in one place.

Sedgwick phenology training Mak­ing phe­nol­ogy obser­va­tions requires close atten­tion to plant anatomy. Image credit: Brian Haggerty

The NRS arm of the study is well under­way. For exam­ple, Hag­gerty has trained 40 Sedg­wick Reserve docents in phe­no­log­i­cal mon­i­tor­ing, ten of whom have com­mit­ted to ded­i­cated weekly mon­i­tor­ing. At Valen­tine Camp and SNARL, vol­un­teers have already been col­lect­ing data through­out the summer.

Reserve man­agers are using this project as a plat­form to engage their local com­mu­ni­ties of sci­en­tists, edu­ca­tors, vol­un­teers, and the pub­lic, help­ing to raise aware­ness of, and par­tic­i­pa­tion with, the UC NRS,” Hag­gerty says. For exam­ple, reserve direc­tor Vin­cent Vogeli of Hast­ings is using project as a core piece of his new docent program.

Hag­gerty and col­leagues are spread­ing the word about Cal­i­for­nia phe­nol­ogy mon­i­tor­ing as broadly as they can. To date, they have trained more than 600 work­shop par­tic­i­pants, writ­ten a book chap­ter and les­son plans, con­ducted a UC Exten­sion class for high school teach­ers, and sub­mit­ted an arti­cle for the Jan­u­ary 2013 issue of Madroño, the jour­nal of the Cal­i­for­nia Botan­i­cal Society

Upcom­ing pre­sen­ta­tions about the project include a lec­ture at a Cal­i­for­nia Native Plant Soci­ety meet­ing in Santa Mon­ica next Thurs­day, Dec. 11, and a phe­nol­ogy field work­shop at the NRS’s Stunt Ranch Santa Mon­ica Moun­tains Reserve Dec. 15, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cit­i­zen sci­en­tists can learn to con­tribute to the study of cli­mate change from their own backyards.

Related Links
UC Nat­ural Reserve Sys­tem Phe­nol­ogy Net­work project descrip­tion
Phe­nol­ogy at Sedg­wick Reserve

Ecologist draws students, city kids to nature’s wonders

Stu­dents cher­ish them. Their col­leagues admire them. For­mer stu­dents remem­ber them as being a major influ­ence in their lives. And now the UCLA Aca­d­e­mic Sen­ate is hon­or­ing them with UCLA’s high­est teach­ing prize. Among the 2011 win­ners: Phil Run­del, Dis­tin­guished Pro­fes­sor of Ecol­ogy and Evo­lu­tion­ary Biol­ogy and Direc­tor of the UCLA Nat­ural Reserves.

Phil Rundel sitting in a meadow.Ecol­o­gist Phil Run­del has been awarded a 2011 UCLA Dis­tin­guished Teach­ing Award.

For­mer stu­dents who are now pro­fes­sors and teach­ers in the life sci­ences describe ecol­o­gist Phil Run­del as that once-in-a-lifetime teacher who changed their career aspi­ra­tions with his con­ta­gious love of plants.

Whether sit­ting in a mega-classroom or small grad­u­ate sem­i­nar, they felt his zeal pulling them into sci­ence. But it was the expe­ri­ence of going on one of his fabled field trips that was noth­ing short of mag­i­cal, they main­tained. There, they fell under the spell of an extra­or­di­nary teacher and ded­i­cated ecol­o­gist whose bound­less enthu­si­asm for explo­ration and dis­cov­ery set them on fire to learn.

As good as Phil’s teach­ing was in the class­room, it was his out-of-classroom men­tor­ship that had the great­est and longest-lasting impres­sion on me,” said Pro­fes­sor of Envi­ron­men­tal Sci­ence and Engi­neer­ing Richard Ambrose, who took his first class with Run­del nearly 40 years ago (after which Ambrose tried to take every Run­del class avail­able). Etched in Ambrose’s mem­ory was a trip to Baja, Cal­i­for­nia, one that Run­del led annu­ally for under­grad­u­ate and grad­u­ate stu­dents at UC Irvine, where he first taught.

These were amaz­ing trips!” Ambrose wrote in a let­ter sub­mit­ted to the Aca­d­e­mic Senate’s teach­ing awards com­mit­tee. “Phil’s enthu­si­asm for desert ecol­ogy and plant phys­i­o­log­i­cal ecol­ogy as well as [his] spirit of adven­ture made these a career-defining moment for every­one involved. In fact, most of the par­tic­i­pants in these infor­mal field trips have gone on to become pro­fes­sor biol­o­gists or teachers.”

Run­del and his stu­dents eat lunch and rest dur­ing a field trip to Mount Pinos north of Los Ange­les. It was on Rundel’s fabled field trips, for­mer stu­dents said, that they got hooked on sci­ence and nature.

Search­ing the desert or Asian rain for­est for birds and plants under Rundel’s lead, stu­dents mar­veled at his vast knowl­edge as a con­sum­mate field biol­o­gist “ever teach­ing, … patiently guid­ing them to explore, dis­cover and share his love of the flora of any par­tic­u­lar area,” said Peter Nar­ins, Dis­tin­guished Pro­fes­sor, who co-taught the pop­u­lar Field Biol­ogy Quar­ter pro­gram at UCLA with Run­del for three years when they took stu­dents to La Selva, Costa Rica; Mae-Sa Val­ley, Thai­land; and Khao Yai National Park, Thailand.

While Run­del said he’s grat­i­fied by the suc­cess of many of his for­mer students-turned-scientists —Life Sci­ences Dean Vic­to­ria Sork among them — he said he is also happy to have influ­enced stu­dents who have not gone on to sci­en­tific careers to think dif­fer­ently about the environment.

And that group includes more than 3,000 school­child­ren from all over Los Ange­les who annu­ally visit the UCLA Stunt Ranch Santa Mon­ica Moun­tains Reserve, part of the UC Nat­ural Reserve Sys­tem, where Run­del is fac­ulty direc­tor. For thou­sands of kids from South and East Los Ange­les, as well as other parts of the city, it is their very first up-close encounter with nature.

From the begin­ning, my phi­los­o­phy has been to stim­u­late stu­dents to develop their own cre­ative think­ing by con­vey­ing to them the excite­ment of sci­ence and the sig­nif­i­cance, as well as per­sonal sat­is­fac­tion, that comes with knowl­edge and new under­stand­ings,” said Run­del, sum­ming up his long teach­ing career.

I felt and con­tinue to feel very strongly that a sci­en­tif­i­cally lit­er­ate pub­lic is of crit­i­cal impor­tance in our mod­ern soci­ety. This goal has per­me­ated my entire career, not just in the for­mal courses … but in my active inter­est in pub­lic out­reach at local, national and inter­na­tional levels.”

By Cyn­thia Lee, UCLA Today