Trending: wild geranium (Geranium maculatum) — 1140 observations this week
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Native Plants
Wild geranium blooming in your local woodland right now is a reliable phenology signal that spring ephemerals have peaked — spot it on your next walk and you're doing the same science as 1,140 observers who logged it this week.
Wild geranium is a native woodland wildflower with distinctive pink-purple blooms that appears across eastern North America each spring. This week, over a thousand people photographed and submitted research-grade observations of it to iNaturalist, making it one of the most-watched plants of the moment. That wave of sightings lines up with its typical May bloom window and shows just how many people are tuning into spring nature right now.
Key Findings
1,140 research-grade observations of wild geranium were submitted to iNaturalist in a single week
The observation spike aligns with Geranium maculatum's peak spring bloom period across its eastern North American native range
The volume of citizen-science records makes this one of the most-observed plant species on the platform this week
chevron_right Technical Summary
Wild geranium (Geranium maculatum) is one of the most-observed plants on iNaturalist this week, with 1,140 research-grade sightings logged by citizen scientists across its native range. The surge reflects peak spring blooming season for this woodland wildflower.
Abstract Preview
wild geranium is among the most observed plant species this week with 1140 research-grade observations.
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Geranium maculatum, the wild geranium, spotted geranium, or wood geranium, is a perennial plant native to woodlands in eastern North America, from southern Manitoba and southwestern Quebec south to Alabama and Georgia and west to Oklahoma and South Dakota.