← Back to StoriesResearch Summary
How animals are coping with global 'weirding' of the seasons New research on marmots in the US reveals how
phenologyclimate changehibernationColorado Rocky MountainsCanadian Rocky MountainsUnited KingdomRocky Mountain Biological LaboratoryGothicGothic MountainMarmota flaviventrisOvis canadensis
Summary
THE UK's weather did a somersault in the first half of 2020, as the wettest February on record gave way to the sunniest spring. Climate change has warped the environmental conditions that might be considered normal, creating progressively weirder seasons that cause havoc for society. Longer, drier s
Related Stories
Profile
He spent almost 50 years alone at 10,000 feet
Feature
Carbon Conundrum Part 3: A Disrupted Ecosystem eEc
Feature
RMBLing into the social scene
Research Summary
RMBL research used for new article on changing climate cues
Profile
The Hermit Who Inadvertently Shaped Climate-Change Science
News Article
Climate change 'throwing nature's timing out of sync'
Feature
The Rogue Energy of Crested Butte on Parade
Feature
Of pancakes, parades and pride in paradise
Related Publications
Publication
How vulnerable are pollen-specialist solitary bees to temperature-mediated shifts in the timing of food availability?
Publication
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Gothic CO Ecology of Place: Making Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Spatially Explicit
Publication
The effects of anthropogenic change on pollination in plant-pollinator communities
Publication
Early snowmelt and warming independently drive the reproductive phenology of subalpine wildflowers
Publication