early-bloom
Early-bloom refers to plants flowering at earlier times than their historical norms, typically in response to changing environmental conditions such as temperature and daylight variations. This is significant for plant science because it reveals how plants sense and respond to climate shifts, and it can disrupt critical ecological timing relationships, such as the synchronization between flowering plants and their pollinators. Studying early-bloom patterns provides essential insights into plant phenology and adaptive responses to environmental change.
iNaturalist · 2026-02-05
Ozark witch-hazel is blooming 3 weeks early across Missouri, driven by January temperatures 2.8C above the 30-year average.
3-week phenological advance
47 observation sites confirm trend
Correlates with +2.8C January anomaly