Monday, July 23, 2012

Nature's Timing


By Angela Ziobro, Summer Environmental Educator

“Isn't that early?” This is a question I have been hearing time and time again since spring set in. From the San Jacinto mountains of California where I teach during the school year to the Northwoods it seems that nature's timing is changing—and this can have startling effects on humans and non-humans alike.

After a showing of Green Fire (the documentary about Aldo Leopold's life and influence) I led a discussion several weeks ago. As always seems to happen as of late, the conversation veered off towards phenology (nature's timing). We learned from one community member that on average the lake he lives on is frozen for 50 less days per year than it was just twenty years ago when he relocated to the area. This fact alone is startling, but when taken in the context of some of the creatures that share these northern lands with us, it might be a question of survival.


The snowshoe hare, for instance, changes color when the amount of light per day changes. This color change will thus happen at the same time each year regardless of weather and plant conditions. Since snow sticks around for a shorter amount of time, and arrives later on average, this could leave the white-colored hares prone to predation in an environment they no longer blend in with.

Here is a link to an article about snowshoe hares and color change in a shifting climate: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090224220347.htm

“Something mysterious happens when we look into the eyes of an animal, whether it be a panther or a poodle—we see something familiar looking back. Ourselves? Yes, but we also see an 'other.' We see something that is in us and yet without us, something we recognize and yet is unfamiliar, something we fear but for which we long. We see the wild.” –Renée Askins

Mammals are not the only creatures that could be negatively affected by the phenological shifts that are happening across our planet. Our avian friends could find struggles in their paths in the near future as well. Birds (along with mammals in many instances) are influenced greatly by day length.

Day length, or photoperiod, plays a key role in the control system that synchronizes the             physiologies of individual birds and their environment...Molt and preparation for migration also                are triggered by changes in day length (Gill, 2007).

If, for instance, a certain species of bird depends on a particular species of berry to build up fat stores for migration and that berry becomes ripe a month sooner than usual the bird will not have that nutrition source when they prepare to travel to their winter habitat. Conversely, when they migrate north, if a major spring food source has already come to fruition and been consumed by permanent residents the birds may not find the necessary nutrition to nest and nourish their young.

Robins love to eat raspberries.

So, enjoy the raspberries that are now ripe in our roadsides and back-country meadows, but remember to be conscious of the changes that are occurring all around us. Perhaps while you enjoy a raspberry sundae you can jot down the events you noticed during your picking expeditions. What other types of berries did you see? How large were the deer fawns you witnessed? When did you first notice loon chicks on the lakes near where you live? Having a base knowledge about nature's timing can help us to understand, and perhaps even help, the other species that share these forests with us.

“One has only to consider the life force...to lay the mind wide open to the  mysteries—the order of things, the why and beginning....One question leads inevitably to another, and all questions come full circle to the questioner, paused momentarily in his own journey under the sun and sky.” –Peter Mattheissen


Works Cited

Gill, F. B. (2007). Ornithology. (3rd ed.). W. H. Freeman.


Snowshoe Hare picture from NPS.gov

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