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Climate change increases flowering duration, driving phenological reassembly and elevated co-flowering richness.

Matthew W AustinGholam Hosein YusefiKenneth M OlsenPeter C HochKyra N KrakosStefani P SchmockerNicole E Miller-Struttmann
Published in: The New phytologist (2024)
Changes to flowering phenology are a key response of plants to climate change. However, we know little about how these changes alter temporal patterns of reproductive overlap (i.e. phenological reassembly). We combined long-term field (1937-2012) and herbarium records (1850-2017) of 68 species in a flowering plant community in central North America and used a novel application of Bayesian quantile regression to estimate changes to flowering season length, altered richness and composition of co-flowering assemblages, and whether phenological shifts exhibit seasonal trends. Across the past century, phenological shifts increased species' flowering durations by 11.5 d on average, which resulted in 94% of species experiencing greater flowering overlap at the community level. Increases to co-flowering were particularly pronounced in autumn, driven by a greater tendency of late season species to shift the ending of flowering later and to increase flowering duration. Our results demonstrate that species-level phenological shifts can result in considerable phenological reassembly and highlight changes to flowering duration as a prominent, yet underappreciated, effect of climate change. The emergence of an autumn co-flowering mode emphasizes that these effects may be season-dependent.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • climate change
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • risk assessment
  • genetic diversity