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Early Spring!

Plant Ecologists Find Evidence That Climate Change Brings Earlier Flower Blooms

March 1, 2005

Scientists say forty years of climate information suggests a warming trend in the earth's atmosphere is causing plants to bloom 1-2 days earlier per decade. Looking at warming trends in the U.S. Northeast, the researchers found lilacs are blooming four days earlier, and apples and grapes -- six to eight days earlier than in 1965.

What's the difference between annuals and perennials?

Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

An annual plant is one that completes its growing cycle -- from seed, to flowering, to producing seed -- in a single season, and must be replanted the following year. Most annuals germinate in the spring, flower in late spring and summer, and die in the autumn, but a few can germinate in late summer and autumn, remain partially dormant over the winter, then resume growth in the spring, completing their cycle in the summer. Some annuals are less hardy than others and can be killed by even light frosts and hence must be grown indoors before planting outside in the spring.

In contrast, perennials are flowering or foliage plants whose roots live from year to year. These plants grow back each spring, either from the original root, or through self-seeding. They typically don't bloom for as long as annuals, however. Some perennials are more delicate and need to stored for the winter and replanted in the spring, but in warmer climates, the root can be left in the ground for the winter.

Common perennials: clematis, meadow sage, evening primrose, black-eyed susan, coral bells, day lilies Common annuals: geraniums, impatiens, marigolds, pansies, begonias, zinnias, Mexican sunflowers

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Did you know?...

Like annuals, biennials pass through their entire life cycle in one course of seasons, but their growth is spread across two years.

More information on this story

Martha J. Heil
mheil@aip.org
American Institute of Physics
Tel: 301-209-3088