Trending: mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) — 1049 observations this week
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Phenology
Mayapple carpets the forest floor of parks and woodlands you may already walk through each spring, and its bloom window is so short that this surge in sightings marks one of the best moments of the year to spot it before it vanishes.
Mayapple is a native wildflower that spreads in large patches on the shaded forest floor and produces a small yellow fruit in late summer. Right now, thousands of nature lovers across North America are photographing and reporting it, helping scientists track exactly when and where it blooms each year. That kind of crowd-sourced data is surprisingly powerful for understanding how spring is shifting with climate change.
Key Findings
1,049 research-grade observations of mayapple were submitted to iNaturalist in a single week, placing it among the top observed plant species.
The spike in observations aligns with mayapple's brief spring bloom period, when its distinctive umbrella-like leaves and single white flower emerge simultaneously.
Citizen-science platforms like iNaturalist are capturing real-time phenology data at a scale traditional field surveys cannot match.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Mayapple is one of the most-watched wildflowers in North America this week, with over 1,000 citizen-science sightings logged in a single week — a strong signal that spring ephemerals are peaking across eastern forests.
Abstract Preview
mayapple is among the most observed plant species this week with 1049 research-grade observations.
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Species Mentioned
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Podophyllum is a genus of flowering plant in the family Berberidaceae, native from Afghanistan to China, and from southeast Canada to the central and eastern United States. The genus was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753.