Another Conwy Valley Woodcock shot, this one in Vologda, Russian Fed. Ringed 29.11.21 shot 30.11.22 presumably before returning.
Duration: 366 days Distance: 2753 km 2nd bird from this site to go as far. @_BTO#waders#phenology#sitefidelity#migration@cofnod#thermalringing
|| NEW RESEARCH ||
Spring phenology rather than climate dominates the trends in peak of growing season in the Northern Hemisphere
📄 https://t.co/2RA46S3jWi
Indiana Phenology is hosting Dr. Park, Assistant Professor at Purdue University, for a free virtual webinar "Plants in Time: Patterns and consequences of variation in phenological responses to climate" on Wednesday, May 24 at 7 pm.
Register here: https://t.co/2LdZZok5iE
Opportunity for FULLY PAID 8-week student placement at the University of Plymouth on #Limpet breeding in a changing world. 📢 https://t.co/7SPQ1Yb80K Deadline June 2nd
❗️New Special Issue "Climate and Meteorological Factors on Horticulture Cultivars: From Phenology to Morphological Physiology"
🎓Guest Editor: Prof. Dr. Sina Cosmulescu
🗓️Deadline: 31 December 2023
All info: https://t.co/EXESdmmYpC
#horticulture
Today I will talk at #ForestSAT2022 about the evaluation of tree phenology derived from Sentinel-2 to improve large-scale tree species mapping 🍃📈🌍 Visit the session about forest attribute maps @WSL_RemoteSens@uzh_geo
@VisitCostaBrava@MarimurtraJardi You're welcome! I am monitoring its birds' population (after listing all the species sorted out by their phenology: Summer breeding species, Wintering, Sedentary...
A new vegetation phenology dataset in northern terrestrial ecosystems is published in @ScientificData by Fang et al. Based on GOSIF GPP data, this phenology dataset consists of start, end, & length of growing season (SOS, EOS, LOS) (0.05-deg; 2001-2020). https://t.co/K3006Up5yT
#Phenology Trail - Observations were leaves of increasing size: lots of green on the maple, elm and sycamore trees!
The colorful purple flowers were eye-catching in the orchard area. Dames Rocket is a member of the mustard family. #Pollinators benefit from spring flowers!
As a part of our ongoing research into the local bird population, we'll be carefully monitoring and ringing new chicks to learn more about their phenology changes due to climate change depending on altitude and type of forest.
#conservation#volunteers
Westport, MA, May 19
Phenology report: Surprised to hear yesterday 1st cricket singing in the cool month of May. First day. Also, orioles flash their bright, orange coats, and robins still busy building nests. Busy busy busy.