early-spring-bloom
Early-spring bloom refers to the phenomenon where certain plant species flower before or immediately after snowmelt, often while temperatures remain near freezing. This timing strategy allows plants to exploit reduced competition for pollinators and maximize reproductive success in seasonally constrained environments. Understanding the physiological and genetic mechanisms behind early bloom is critical for predicting how plant communities will respond to shifting climate patterns and phenological mismatches.
Trending: western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) — 138 obser...
Western skunk cabbage is a key early-spring indicator species — if you walk near wetlands or stre...
Trending: western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) — 136 obser...
Skunk cabbage is one of the first wildflowers to appear each spring in Pacific Northwest wetlands...
Trending: western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) — 128 obser...
Western skunk cabbage is one of the first plants to emerge each spring — often pushing through sn...
Trending: Osoberry (Oemleria cerasiformis) — 135 observations this week
Osoberry is a bellwether of spring — if you live in the Pacific Northwest, seeing it bloom means ...