Phenology (FALL/SEASONS) with Libby Ellwood - podcast episode cover

Phenology (FALL/SEASONS) with Libby Ellwood

Sep 24, 20191 hr 26 minEp. 107
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Episode description

The seasons are a-changin'! It's sweater weather in both hemispheres and seasonal researcher and expert Phenologist Dr. Libby Ellwood weighs in with amazing information about why fall smells so good, why leaves change color, why we like to cronch them, historical records of blossoms and twigs, bird migrations, Daylight Savings, seasonal mythbusting, pumpkin spice vs. apple cider, the best temperature to wear sweaters, why the Halloween aisle springs up in summer and how global temperature shifts affect the whole food web. Bonus: the most candid, touching thoughts Alie's ever heard from a scientist studying climate. Get this one in your ears and hearts. Follow Dr. Libby Ellwood on TwitterA donation went to SaveGPOrangutans.org Sponsor links: Zevoinsect.com/ologies; linkedin.com/ologies; calm.com/ologies; betterhelp.com/ologies; More links up at alieward.com/ologies/phenologyBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a month: www.Patreon.com/ologiesOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, pins, totes and STIIIICKERS!Follow twitter.com/ologies or instagram.com/ologiesFollow twitter.com/AlieWard or instagram.com/AlieWardSound editing by Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam Media & Steven Ray MorrisTheme song by Nick ThorburnSupport the show: http://Patreon.com/ologies
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Transcript

Speaker 1

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Speaker 3

Oh hey, it's your old pops. We're in a cardigan, sitting on the porch with a cup of instant coffee, just watching the windblow, smell in the storm a comin. It's alli worth back with another episode of Ologies. Apologies if you will, because this topic I have talked about on a previous episode a minisode last year or the year before, just mentioning that it exists. But this year we dove fase first into a pile of crispy rustling Lee to bring you a one on one interview all

about the changing of the seasons. But before we drift into it, a little business up top. Thank you to all the patrons on patreon dot com slash Ologies for belonging to the backstage club and submitting your questions to Theologists. You two can join first Littlest twenty five cents an episode if you would like. We could not make the show without you. And thanks to everyone who rates and subscribes to Ologies. It keeps us up there and the

science charts with the big giants just little less. And especially to those folks who take a few minutes to use their thumbs to write a review for me to lurk on like a creep and I can just pluck a fresh eet each week to prove it, such as for example, Aaron Miranda said the other day, I was telling my aunt about ticks ecology, and she said, fifty percent of me is like, wow, you're such a cool person, and fifty percent of me is like, wow, you are

exceptionally weird. And I think that was the best compliment I've ever received. Thanks Dad for teaching be everything I know. Aaron Miranda, thank you for that. That was lovely. Also, thank you to Terry's child for stealing your mother's phone to write a review. I appreciated it. Okay, Phenology, The first thing you need to know is that this isn't phrenology. There is no R in there no R. Phrenology is a weird, racist, iniquated study of human skulls that is

pure flum flam. Phenology, however, comes from the word phenomenon, which means to show in Greek, and it's the study of the timing of natural events or the influence of climate on cyclical natural happenings, So seasonal business. An ecologist named Charles Morien first used the term in eighteen forty nine, Thanks Chuck. So what better time to get all up

in phonology than as the summer turns to fall. Colors start warming up, the air, cools, squirrels, hard things, the trees in the yard start becoming mustard and ochre and russet and ruby. People stop shaving all manner of body parts, and hot girl summer turn into a hot nerd fall.

It's a real hashtag. Get into it. So I was looking for a good phonologist and came across a recent special issue of Applications in Plant Sciences, and it was titled Emerging Frontiers in Phenological Research, and this ologist was a co editor of the entire issue. I was like, boy, howdy, I bet she knows her phenological shit man. So obviously she lives in like a thatched masonry cottage in the New England Woods. But Lo, no, she's based in Los Angeles. Why why? And can I ask her about it? I can,

and I did so. I toddled over one sunny, hot September afternoon, like last week to her office at the Page Museum at the Librea tar Pits, and she met me in the parking lot. We were both in jeans, but only one of us was cool enough to be wearing a Ramone T shirt and sneakers and a museum

employee lanyard. Spoiler. That person was not me. And we went down to her office and we settled in for a chat, covering all things cozy, like leaves changing color and crisp autumn skies, cider versus pumpkins, spice lattes, migratory bird gossip, how climate affects flora and fauna, how to make your backyard into a critter Kegger and the technology

making phonology easier and how you can get involved. Now, this episode has so many twists and turns, and she is so charming and funny and candid and real, and parts of this episode surprise the hell out of me. And in those parts there's minimal to no editing. You'll know when you get there. So without nattering on, put the kettle on, grab kerchief, and cozy up to ecologists and seasons researching phonologist doctor Libby Ellwood. Are you an East Coaster by birth?

Speaker 4

I am. I'm from Long Island, New York.

Speaker 5

Heard of it, yes, and then did my undergrad at the University of Rhode Island. I got a Bachelor's of Science in marine biology.

Speaker 3

Marine biology, yes, indeed so. She then got a master's in teaching at the University of Southern Maine amazing fall foliage, and got her PhD in biology in Boston, Massachusetts. Your foliage also slaps. Now. She had been studying marine biology from a molecular level, and she says what drew her were the big questions, the how do all these systems fit together? Questions which led her to study ecosystems terrest Really, how did you become a phonologist?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 5

So when I was in grad school and I was reaching out to my advisor before he was my advisor, I was interested in how climate change was affecting plans and animals and kind of in a big picture of way, and I was thinking about migrations and just ways of examining how climate change is impacting critters. And Phonology is the study of cyclic events in a plant or animals life cycle, So is everything from when plants flower to when insects emerge or migratory birds arrive, all of those

kinds of events that happen usually every year. It could be more than that, but usually on an annual basis, And that is often associated with other variables, like, for example, when plants flower in the spring, it's usually because the temperature has reached a certain temperature and then it's warm enough for them to bloom, and so then we could record that date, and on and on and on over the years. We can get a lot of information about that.

Speaker 3

Do you have to study a bit of astronomy as well to understand how the Earth is going around the sun? Like how much does that play into the basis of your work?

Speaker 5

Not too much, Okay, it's a lot of more earth bound variables that we look into. So lots of climate variables, temperature, precipitation, even things potentially like humidity or soil temperature. Are things like that that might impact the organism here and now.

Speaker 3

And quick aside. So the Earth's axis is what scientists call wonkafied just kidding, that's not a term. What I mean is that the Earth's axis is just tilted. So as we cruise around the giant fireball in the sky, one hemisphere gets more direct sunlight howk girl summer. The other gets less of a sunlight blast, hence hot nerd fall.

Now what about sweater weather. Well weather dot com conducted a pole of over six thousand people, and that crisp, nippy, grab a Cardigan weather was on average agreed upon to be right at sixty degrees sixty degrees grab us wetter. Of course, that's the average for the United States. Now, live in South Dakota, you likely can get down to fifty one degrees before you consider shoving a hoodie in

your bag. But Nevada, you're looking at a dip to sixty five degrees and you're like, whoah, it's chili, gotta pop on a sweater, and so do you think that in terms of phonology and in terms of seasonal changes, especially like our fall in spring the ones that you pay most attention to, or is there just as much action happening in the dead of winter in the heat of summer.

Speaker 5

Yeah, So my work was mostly in the New England area where that is definitely the case that spring and fall are the big seasons because things are relatively quiet in the winter and so then springs all of a sudden, a big event. Yeah, it's when the flowers come out, it's when insects and marriage, it's when the birds return

and all of that kind of stuff. And so that's true for a lot of temperate regions in the northern hemisphere and then oppositely on in the southern hemisphere in the fall, and then yeah, during the summer, a lot of things have settled down. So once the migratory birds have arrived, for example, they're there to breed and so they do their thing all summer, they're hanging out, and then they will start their southern migration usually in the fall.

So that's another thing too that we have a lookout for. Be on the lookout for also, that would be when the leaves start to change color and leaves fall, and

then you know, it's pretty quiet for the winter. So those cyclic events are most common, right, like you said, in the spring and fall, But in other places, like in the desert or in even here in southern California, those events could be happening at other times of the year, and it could be more dependent on rain which might come in the winter, or or drought which might happen later in the summer.

Speaker 4

Things like this.

Speaker 3

So there's like cacti, they are like, don't sleep on me. I'm over here. It rained, I'm blooming executive. I mean notice right now. Yeah, now, okay, you're from the East Coast, you live in Los Angeles, you must get this question so much like, how do you deal with the lack of seasons that are as dramatic as say, on the Stern seaboard.

Speaker 5

Well, thank you for phrasing it that way, because I feel like, at least at first when I moved out here, I really felt the lack of seasons, and any Angelina would say, oh, no, we have seasons. Yeah, Like, just give it a little while and you'll get it. And still after four years of being here, I'm going to maintain that the seasons might exist, but they are pretty subtle, very subtle. Sometimes you kind of miss them, Like if we have a dry winter and it just doesn't rain

that much, it just just feels like extended spring or something. So, yes, that did take some getting used to, and I'm still getting used to.

Speaker 3

It. Does that drive you crazy at all?

Speaker 4

It does?

Speaker 5

It absolutely does, because I really like today it's you know, the middle of September, and to me, it could be July, it could be May. Like I don't really know what month it is, so I often find myself still kind of confused because it's not I feel like it should be getting onto sweater weather.

Speaker 4

It's not quite sweater weather.

Speaker 3

I know, I have an aspirational flannel with me. I'm not going to put that on. I'm in a tank top. I wore boots today and I was like, shouldn't want flip flops. Yeah, there's a heat advisory. So why are you doing your work here in la instead of just like deep in the woods over a covered bridge in Vermont?

Speaker 5

Yeah?

Speaker 4

Wow, that covered bridge and Vermont does sound pretty nice.

Speaker 5

I know. It was the two body problem that brought me out here. So I was a postdoc at the time where it was a position I could do remotely, and my husband got a position out here, so truth be told, I was a trailing spouse.

Speaker 3

Liby says that her job was flexible, and after that position ended, she started a new one at the Librea Tarpets, analyzing plant matter and mammal bones unmooked from the sticky asphalt vats outside to help understand paleo food webs so she can work on seasons even if LA doesn't really have intense and all shifts. We'll say, is it weird for you to talk about the weather in a way that is not shallow, because like you talking about the weather is in some deep shit, like that's like your life.

Like how do you approach people chit chatting about that?

Speaker 5

Oh?

Speaker 4

I love it.

Speaker 5

I love letter chick chat. I could letter chit chat all day long. You know, when you're the first couple people on the conference call and you're waiting for the six people to show up.

Speaker 3

Hey it's Tina, who else of on the call?

Speaker 5

But no, you go, now you go, and it's that awkward small talk time and they're like, oh, how's the weather?

Speaker 3

By you?

Speaker 5

I'm like, yeah, let's talk about that. Let's let's go deep on that.

Speaker 3

You're like taking data sets. You're like, what temperature did you say, Randy, okay, seventy eight? Got it?

Speaker 5

Got it?

Speaker 3

Got it?

Speaker 4

Is that usually warmer core for you? Interesting?

Speaker 3

And so what is your work entail? Like, what are what kind of numbers are you crunching? Are you looking at plants? Are you looking at leaves changing? Are you looking at birds? All of the above?

Speaker 5

Yeah, yes to all of that. And it is a lot of data crunching. That's really the crux of it. So when I'm looking at addressing climate change, for example, which is really at the heart of a lot of this, it's understanding how things were and how things used to be compared to how they are now. And so for that we need historic data sets. So we have to kind of be creative about how and where we get those.

And that's kind of what brought me to the museum world too, is access to data from one hundred, two hundred or more years ago. Because at museums there are specimens. There are barriom specimens, so press plants that are housed and maintained at museums, and those are just a wealth of data for understanding what plants were like, for example, one hundred or two hundred years ago. So that's one way of getting the data and the numbers that I need.

Another way is to look into the archives of sometimes museums, but also libraries and special collections and things like that, and that's where you'll find field notes or journals and people recording their observations of what they.

Speaker 4

Saw when they saw it and all of that.

Speaker 5

And one of the things that has been really fruitful for me and for the lad that I was a part of in grad school was the was the journalist from Henry David Threau and his musings as he walked around Walden Pond and he took notes of what flowers were in bloom, what birds he was seeing in all of that.

Speaker 3

So do you think more people should be journaling nature journaling?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 3

Yeah, and then just like give it to a museum. You're here, I saw daffodil. It was whatever January, probably by that Moaven because we're so screwed. But do you have any kind of personal affinity toward that kind of journaling and that kind of history. Did you grow up loving natural history in a.

Speaker 4

Really casual way.

Speaker 5

I guess more in the walk in the woods kind of way than the journaling kind of way, and appreciation for taking notes like that, and I think a general appreciation for observing the world around me or just enjoying time outside.

Speaker 3

So getting back to collections and archives, you're mentioning like a leaf that was say pressed, what kind of information are you getting from that? Are you just looking at it? Has it changed color over the years? Do you stick it through a chromatic graph? Not a word?

Speaker 5

Yeah, not so much with the chromatograph. That might be a thing, but it's not something I usually use. What I'm looking at is some kind of evidence of a pheno phase. So is it flowering? Is is there some kind of reproductive phase that's represented on the plant? So a flower, of fruit, a seed, something that is evident on the plant, and even a twig for example, could

be a phase that this plant is dormant. So this was during the winter, hopefully probably in the northern hemisphere, and then it was maybe later in the spring that plant would have flowered. But so that even that kind of information is informative, or if it doesn't have a reproductive structure like a flower or fruit, and it's just

leaves that that too is a pheno phase. If it's fully leafed out, that means that it was probably growing and representing the growing season being up and running where that plant was living.

Speaker 3

And usually they'll tag like it was the thirteenth of March, and.

Speaker 5

Yeah, all that information is really critical to it. So it would have the collection date and the collector, the species name. All of that information will will use to understand when that phenol phase occurred and where and put our little dot on the map and then be able to crunch all those numbers.

Speaker 3

Ps. I didn't know what a pheno phase was, so I looked it up and according to the USA National Phonology Network, it's quote an observable stage in the annual life cycle of a plant or animal that can be defined by a start and endpoint. So it's usually pretty short lived. It's things like ooh a new flower or oh the trees yellow, undune, salt. How do you just go for a walk, Like how do you walk through your parking lot without being like, oh, look at that, Oh look at that.

Speaker 5

It seems like it would be. So there's data everywhere there are and it's that's fantastic. And if you've ever been on a hike with botanists, it's just great. You're never that one who's out of breath and huffing and puffing because we're stopping in every plant to identify it and check it out and just look at the birds.

Speaker 4

It's great.

Speaker 3

Oh wow, look at this. And now, okay, real, real, stupid question. Let's talk about leaves changing color, because we're in September. It's air quotes fall in Los Angeles. Yeah, leaves, Why do they change color? How's it happen?

Speaker 5

Yeah? So it has to do with chemical changes in the leaf that are probably mostly impacted by the changing levels of light. A tree, a plant will be able to sense that the light levels are changing, that it's getting lighter later and earlier, and that will be a sign for them to start making chlorophyll. And as the chlorophyll amount concentration decreases in the leaf, it'll be less green, and therefore the other colors that are naturally in the

leaf will become more visible and more vibrant. And depending on what other chemicals are in the plant, some trees or some plants might change to these beautiful reds or yellows or oranges, what other trees or plants might just

turn brown and leaves just kind of fall off. But it all has to do with the environment signaling to the plant that the season is changing, and cooler temperatures can also do that, or even drought conditions or drier weather, or if the plant is under stress, that can also indicate, Yeah, I'm just gonna give up and drop all these leaves.

Speaker 3

Oh they're just gonna dip.

Speaker 4

Yeah, they try again next year.

Speaker 3

Looks, I'll see you guys next fall. So if you let's say you're looking at like an orange leaf or a beautiful yellow leaf, that color was there all along, but the green was just kind of stealing its thunder.

Speaker 4

Yeah exactly.

Speaker 5

And I don't know off the top of my head what the orange flavor is versus the red one.

Speaker 3

Now, in case you're on a too quiet car ride through the leafy woods and you need a topic of conversation, carotenoids and flavonoids bring the yellow carotenoids responsible for the orange hues too. See also the stuff and carrots and anthocyanins are the compounds producing those beautiful reds now in the spring and summer. There's a lot of light and warmth, so there's tons of chlorophyll production, But those flavonoids and carotenoids and anthocyanins are hanging out underneath the green.

Speaker 5

Those are always there in lower concentrations. And then the chlorophyll is just so important for the tree to on the plant to be producing lots of chlorophyll to be able to photosynthesize all through the growing season that that's what we see as the green leaves.

Speaker 3

And what's the point of a tree having a growing season and a shedding season versus say, others evergreens perennials that are no, I'm in it to win it all year round, Like who's doing what and why.

Speaker 5

Plants have all kinds of different strategies evolutionary strategies that have made them successful over you know, eons. So yeah, it really depends on because even within the same ecosystem, you could have deciduous trees and evergreen trees and it's just working for them. Even trees that are evergreen will often lose some of their leaves in the winter and then grow new ones in the spring. They just sort

of appear to be fuller than a deciduous tree. Yeah, it depends just what advantages or disadvantages that particular species has found to be most successful.

Speaker 3

And the trees that shed their leaves, they're living off sugars in the root system and the in different parts of the tree.

Speaker 4

Yeah, yep.

Speaker 5

And you know, which is similar to how a deciduous tree is doing it too. It's just our Yeah, that's how all trees are doing it and what is available to them at that time.

Speaker 4

And so often in cooler.

Speaker 5

Areas is where you'll have more deciduous trees because they are will drop their leaves and during the winter be more dormant because they're not able to suck up the water and the sugars and do what they need to do as trees. So they do become more dormant in the cooler weather. And that's a strategy that works for those.

Speaker 3

Plants and human beings who just just sweater weather, couch weather.

Speaker 4

That Swedish or like hug Yeah.

Speaker 3

So side note, this word looks like higgy, but it's pronounced hohoga. And in the Cabinology episode, I made my friend Scandinavian gismologist Simone Yetch, which looks like Geerts pronounce it and it's cabins, laziness, throw blankets. Is there ever a bad time for these things?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 3

Hohoba's hell, just like bundle up? Do you do you tend to get fall fever? Are you more excited about spring?

Speaker 4

Hmmm? Equal excitement?

Speaker 3

Okay.

Speaker 5

I a colleague of mine who is in grad school the same time as me, in the same lab, would wake up just sweating in a cold sweat each spring, like, oh no, I missed the first flowing of this planned and you know she would be weeks off from actually doing that, but there are you know, you could have phenology nightmares, phonology terrors in the weeks and months leading up to those important seasons.

Speaker 3

Do you ever notice in fall? Do you ever notice like the first leaf you see drop? Like that happens to me sometimes some years where I'll see like a yellow leaf flutter and I'll be like, who, what's the first one? Does that happen to you?

Speaker 5

Yeah? Oh for sure? And you know, getting back to your spring or fall question, I think I'm more of a spring person and that sort of romantic hopefulness and optimism that comes with it versus the fall, which I appreciate for the cooler weather and the beautiful colors. It does also feel a little bit like, can I say depressing?

Speaker 3

Yeah? Sure, hell yeah. I mean there's the seasonal affection disorder spells out SAD. That's like the most obvious backronym ever, sad PS. One of my favorite words is backronym, and it means an acronym that on purpose spells something cheeky or cheesy or obvious. I hate backronyms themselves, but I

love that we have a word for backronyms. So Seasonal effective disorder was coined in nineteen eighty four by psychologist doctor Norman Rosenthal, and it affects women four times more than men, and folks in the northern US more than the Southern US, according to Research Now. A twenty sixteen article in Psychology, Research and Behavior Management found that winter depression effects between one to ten percent of North Americans

and it's related to latitude New Hampshire. One study found that nine point seven percent of you have the SADS, but only one point four percent get it in Florida and symptoms, in case you're wondering, include sleeping more, wanting to do less, wanted to eat carbs. I can't figure out how ninety percent of the population isn't afflicted with

this all winter long. But anyway, seasonal effective disorder is serious and it's a type of depression, and having it spelled SAD seems oddly both official and empathetic, kind of like a TSA agent putting their hand on your shoulder or a court bailiff giving you a hug. But what about when's your birthday?

Speaker 4

September?

Speaker 3

Okay, Okay, you've just flipped my theory on its head, because I have a theory that people's favorite season is always when their birthday is Oh, because I love fall November birthday. My sister big fan of summer July. So my theory is garbage. I need more data. I need more data. I'm going to do a Twitter pole because of you. I did some very official scientific research via a Twitter pole and found that only thirty two percent

of people's favorite season was also their birthday season. I thought this number would be one hundred percent, because growing up, when that season came around, you're like, oo, shit, my birthday's coming up. I am so disappointed that this number was less than one hundred percent. However, thirty two percent is seven points higher than the twenty five percent randomized probability. Also, more US babies are born in September than any of

the other months. Researchers think that freezing, cold winters and shorter days, not a lot of outdoor activities like badminton that kick the can have something to do with it. So a lot of people born in September. The start of fall is objectively the best time of year. So I'm a genius. My theory is solid. Thank you for attending my PhD defense. I am a doctor now. So now the season's changing, and seeing that in birds and in plants that is partly daylight and partly temperature.

Speaker 5

For most organisms, we find that it's temperature, okay, and or at least I should say for plants it's temperature. For birds, it's probably a combination. And even other behavioral factors like birds consense that they've been in a location for a particular amount of time and heck, it's just time to leave. Can we get the Please went to go north. It's been three months here in Costa Rica. Now I need to go back up to Maine or

whatever it is. They have to kind of be aware of the fact that where they're going might be ready for them now, and so their food source might be ready and they need to.

Speaker 3

Fit the road announcement. I have a very stupid question, and I'm asking it anyway near the equator, are the seasons less distinct?

Speaker 5

Yes?

Speaker 3

Okay, And so does your work take you kind of to closer to the poles? Would you say?

Speaker 5

Yeah? Or at least that's what I'm most familiar with, and far less work has been done in tropical and subtropical worlds as far as phonology is concerned, and that's kind of a wide open area for research. And there has been some work done on plants, especially that live in tropical and subtropical areas, but yeah, those queues aren't

quite as strong. So if any of you guys out there have lived in arctic or even temperate areas, you know that comes spring, you kind of feel that energy to just live life again and to get out of your hole and do the things. So animals and plants kind of feel that to an extent too. So there's a real spring pop of phonology, and so we have records for hundreds of years because of that, where hundreds of years ago people were excited by that be like wooho,

I saw this first flower today. I saw this first bird today after so long of not seeing it and being holed up in my living room for six months. So in closer to the equator, there are certainly more subtle phenological events happening.

Speaker 3

Of course, fall leaves may fall a week or three later than the previous year, or spring may spring early. So Libby says, the more data you have over more time, the better sense you get of the whole picture. And just like firstborns have way more baby pictures neatly tucked into albums than their younger siblings, some seasons have better records, and so spring is probably better documented than falls.

Speaker 5

A Yeah, and likewise, it's easier to see when that first leaf shows up on a tree than it is to see when that first leaf falls off.

Speaker 3

Yeah, that's true. Like it came out, there was a pile. And what can I tell you? What is a rundown of the function of each season? We did to think of summer as like this feeding season and then kind of like a feast and a famine through winter is Does that do anything for plants, like to reset their cycles or anything for animals?

Speaker 1

Oh?

Speaker 5

Yeah, right, so birds will often have, at least in the northern hemisphere, they're breeding seas and is in the summer, so during the winter they're fattening up, they're getting ready they come back north, and they're establishing their territories, building their nests and then making a family. And so there

are those kinds of things with certain animals. And then for plants to plants have a chilling requirement in the northern hemisphere, so they'll need to actually be dormant for a certain amount of time to then recognize that it's getting warmer again and to know that they could start

producing flowers and leaves and that spring is here. But if they don't get that chilling requirement, if we were to have a really warm winter, for example, and doesn't get cold enough for them to meet their chilling requirement, then their spring phrenology can be thrown off.

Speaker 3

Okay, what about seasonal movies, any movies that involve the changing of seasons, particularly fall, Since it's late September that you really feel like, get it right or really annoy you.

Speaker 5

It has happened where I'm watching TV or a movie and they'll claim to be in New York in a and then you see that cherry tree flowering, and you're like, that's April.

Speaker 4

That's so April.

Speaker 3

They've just busted in a bunch of like silk leaves and put them on the ground. I always hate that when there are people in like a winter street and they're all bundled up but there's no breath coming out. You can't see their breath, and I'm like, you're all wearing ear muffs, like, come on, what are you doing to us? Put it in post? That drives me crazy.

So fun fact, the breath in Titanic was added in post and to make it they had to get a really cold room and I had to lign it with black velvet and have people talk as they filmed these puffs of warm breath, and then they took those and super imposed them on jacket rose floating on wreckage. Now keep in mind this was in nineteen ninety seven, when cell phones were the size of your shoe, and before you could use a filter on them to make you look like a tiger. So come on, movies, you can

do this. So do you have any kind of celebrations of your own when it comes to seasonal things? Are you ever hitting the like scarecrow isle at Michael's like in August whenever they start putting it out.

Speaker 5

Like my own personal phonology. Yeah, you know, I'm terrible with personal traditions and things like that, So maybe I just get enough of it in my day job that I don't carry that on into my personal life.

Speaker 3

But it makes sense. I do feel like commerce is screwing us up because we used to wait until we saw these cues in nature, and now literally, like at Walgreens, it's like back to school season in July. I just went to CBS yesterday whole pumpkin isle. What do you think about the way that human beings take cues from their environment?

Speaker 5

Well, I think you right there just propose a great Michael's phonology study where you look at over time when that pumpkin ale establishes itself and how that has just crept earlier and earlier, and it's probably due to climate change. So you know, you could probably published that.

Speaker 3

Oh my god, getting wereb getting my masters? Now that I have my PhD in Twitter birthday polls, I might as well get my masters in what the retail industry calls Christmas creep or holiday creep, which sounds like a guy to Barr who thinks his Santa hat is charming, but you're like, please, under no circumstances talk to me. So this early sales tactic, it's been in effect since Victorian times. And in a Slate article they cite a Philadelphia Inquirer quote saying gift buying has begun in earnest

it seems to get earlier every year. Now that article was written nineteen oh one, so people have been complaining about this for plenty of time. How has climate change affected craft stores and the planet and phonology, because I mean this is a hot topic obviously, How what is the data really showing?

Speaker 5

So the data are really clear that when it is warmer or when other climate variables are out of whack, that the plants and animals are likewise out of whack. And the most responsive seem to be the plants, and usually in the northern hemisphere they will react with earlier phonology, So when it's warmer, they will respond with flowering earlier, and that could be a couple of weeks earlier, it

could be six weeks earlier. And insects are slightly less, so it appears there are less responsive to climate cues and birds even less so, and that could partially be because birds are migrating from elsewhere where they're not getting the same climate cues, and so if it's a really warm year here, might not be a really warm yer in their wintering grounds, so they could be getting different cues. But yeah, climate change is impacting all kinds of things.

And not only does that impact that one organism or even that one species, but if plants flower earlier because it was a really warm year, but then let's say the insects aren't responding quite as readily, but they're emerging

like at the same time they always did. Well, then when they emerge the plants that they're used to munching on those nice fresh young leaves, well those leaves might be fully established and be rough, tough, difficult to digest leaves, and so then the insects might suffer because of that, And then the birds show.

Speaker 4

Up at the same time they always do, and maybe.

Speaker 5

There are fewer insects or the whole thing could just be messed up. So that's called an ecological mismatch. Oh and climate is a likely contributor to things like that.

Speaker 3

And can temperature differences of just a few degrees make that big of an impact. How does that happen?

Speaker 5

So that too is pretty species specific, but yeah, even a couple of degrees can make a big difference.

Speaker 3

And what about fall if it's staying warmer longer, what's happening with those cues?

Speaker 5

Yeah, so looking to plants again, just because plants are probably the most well studied and the easiest to study, and so it's possible that some of them might drop their leaves earlier than they should just because their leaves have lived their life.

Speaker 3

So plants may have a shorter growing season if it gets too warm, or the growing season might continue longer. Wait is that good? Don't trees want to continue growing? And why aren't they marketed gummy vitamins that promise fuller leaves and longer stems.

Speaker 5

The growing season and the length of the growing season then impacts all kinds of things like nutrients cycling. So when a tree is active during the growing season, it's sucking up water, it's slucking up nutrients from the soil and impacting the whole ecosystem in doing so, and then if it drops its leaves, it's doing less of that.

So the more time that all those trees are active can really impact the whole ecosystem, not just that one tree, or not even just the insects that might be depending on it, but everything all around.

Speaker 3

When the leaves fall off of trees, who's munching on them? What's happening? Like? Are they important for groundcover or can they pretty much stay or go?

Speaker 5

They're really important for groundcover. And by the time the leaf falls and is dead and is on the ground, then you're entering the realm of microorganisms and decomposers and things like that. So there's some insects and invertebrates that might lunch on them, and then you quickly get into fungi and bacteria that are eating them and decomposing them.

Speaker 3

Should you rake your lawn or not?

Speaker 5

I'd say not unless where you are it happens to be a fire hazard. And I don't want to encourage anybody to create fire hazards around them. But generally, maintaining things in the most natural way possible is the way to do it. So, contrary to Trump's advice to rake our forests, you gotta take care of the floors. You know, the floors of the forest very important.

Speaker 3

All we gotta do.

Speaker 5

Yeah, I'd say leave them and maybe take on some other strategies to prevent fires. But yeah, leaving your leaves on the ground is good because the leaves or the trees have taken up those nutrients and created those leaves, and then when they fall, you're you know, you're completing the cycle and the nutrients can return to the soil.

Speaker 3

Could you rake your leaves in a pile and jump in them and then spread them out again?

Speaker 4

Heck yes, I recommend doing so.

Speaker 3

Did you ever do that growing up in New England?

Speaker 4

Yeah, a little bit.

Speaker 3

We used to do that where I grew up, And now I think, wow, there's so many mites on you. But I still want to do it. I just want to do it in a full scuba suit because I'm afraid of like lingering ticks and stuff.

Speaker 5

Oh yeah, ticks are our problem. But I think otherwise you're probably boosting your immune system and interacting with all those great microorganisms. I think it's a good thing.

Speaker 3

You just got to check your crevices, You're good to go. I do love this time of year. Is my favorite time of year for like dogs jumping into leaf piles. Oh, it's the best. And also Halloween costumes. Ye, what about flim flam that you would love to debunk about seasons or climate change? I mean there's a lot there. But what myths about seasons or autumn? Are you?

Speaker 4

Like?

Speaker 5

Yeah, so i'd say climate change is a huge climate change is I mean we're screwed right?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 5

Climate change is here, it hits real, and it's big bad news. Let's repeat that, climate change is here, it hits real, and it's big bad news.

Speaker 3

What can we do?

Speaker 5

But I think we also shouldn't forget about all the other big bad news that's out there, like the Amazon rainforest is burning to the ground. In addition to taking big climate change action at a government level, on an international level, of course, all of those things, but there are other conservation related actions that we can also take that helps give more species of fighting chance come climate change.

Because climate change is happening already, but if we don't plow over habitats, then we're giving more species a chance to have a go and actually survive through the changes that are coming.

Speaker 3

Is there anything that you do in your life, knowing what you know, to help mitigate it on any level you can? I mean other than voting, which we all know is the most important.

Speaker 5

Yeah, is totally the most important. In addition, I killed all the grass in my lawn and have planted a lot of native plants, so created some habitat for some bugs and birds, and you know, created our own little place where things can be a little bit not even greener, but more natural and more inviting. And because in La La is just such a huge, huge city that takes up so much space that having little pockets where plants

and animals can be is really helpful. At a really local, hyperlocal backyard level, we can invite all of those things to live.

Speaker 3

Do you ever sit out and bug watch and bird watch and see what comes and hangs out?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 3

What have you got?

Speaker 4

Well?

Speaker 5

I used to work from home, which was amazing because I would just stare out the wind all day with my binoculars, get really distracted, but had a great time with my bird guide and identifying everything. And for a while I had a trail cam set up. I have a tiny, tiny backyard in the middle of Los Angeles, but was constantly amazed and fascinated by the visitors that

we would get. It would be raccoons, just having parties back there, but just seeing them do their thing at two am on our little camera was fantastic.

Speaker 3

Are those expensive?

Speaker 4

They're not.

Speaker 5

You get one for like one hundred bucks or less, and you should do it. And I've been really tempted to take it with me if I'm camping or on vacation somewhere, I could put it up in the woods and just kind of see what else is there. I haven't really quite gotten to that step yet, but.

Speaker 3

Just next day go for grizzlies. How about it? Look at that? Yeah, I smelled something interesting. Quick aside, what about hummingbird feeders? Is it bad to leave them up? Flim flam consider debunked, So having hummingbird feeders won't deter the little friends from flying south, and in more southern regions, keeping them up may actually help out migratory hummers who need a pit stop or who are overwintering in your region.

You can also plant native flowers, especially those that have seeds, which is a more natural way to have bird feeders in the yard if you prefer to do that. I have a hummingbird feeder right outside my window. Let me tell you, it's like having an aquarium made out of the whole world, or maybe the hummingbirds are like, man, this restaurant's great. It's got a terrarium with one big, weird lady in it. And sometimes she doesn't even bother wearing pants. I can see a future of me. That's

a bird lady, and I like her. How are birders seeing the change in seasons? Do you get a lot of data from birders?

Speaker 4

Thank god, we do.

Speaker 5

Birders are just such meticulous no takers. Yes, and they love their life lists, and that enables us to go back a couple hundred years really to see when birds were arriving, what birds were around, and so it's really a lot of the work of a phonologist is finding those old records. So yeah, birds are where it's up.

Speaker 3

Oh how did I not ask this next question yet? What in the daylight is wrong with me? What do you think about daylight saving time? Let's get over it.

Speaker 4

No more? Okay, no more. Why do we have to do that?

Speaker 3

Thank you? That makes me feel so much better. It usually falls right around my birthday, which is a bummer, and it gets dark so early, and people have like heart attacks from losing an hour of sleep. It's so bad for people. Okay, I know heart attacks. Car accidents.

Speaker 4

No, we don't need it.

Speaker 3

Can I ask you questions from patrons?

Speaker 5

Yeah?

Speaker 4

Please do?

Speaker 3

Okay, so many, all right, but before we get to your patroon questions, you may hear a few words about sponsors of the show. But before that, these sponsors make it possible for ologies to donate to a different cause each week of the ologist choosing, and this week Libby picked save Gparrangutans dot Org. This is the Gunngal Orangutan Project whose mission is to protect orangutang populations and forest biodiversity in and around gunan Palung National Park on the

island of Borneo. They say, recognizing that most threats to a rangutank survival are human induced, to we take a multifaceted community based approach to conservation, Livy says they do great work. They're her favorite conservation organization, so that is save GPO ranguetank dot Org. There'll be a link to that in the show notes, as well as link to sponsors. So if this is a newly posted episode, you may hear some sponsor offers just for ologites. Okay, back to

your automny Springy questions. Okay, from the mouth of a seasonal doctor, let's see Sofi kost note says, what is your favorite most unusual seasonal phenomenon that people don't even know is link to seasons?

Speaker 4

Oh? Interesting.

Speaker 5

I think there's a lot of phonology that we're actually not even super aware of. And most of our studies have been on the terrestrial world, but there's a whole lot of marine things happening out there that you know. There are marine metals that migrate, there are fish that migrate, and all these things that we're just not as in tune too as we are with those that are literally in our backyard.

Speaker 3

Do you terrestrial animals shed more in the fall or the spring? Do we get hairrier?

Speaker 5

I don't think we do, although we for yourself, but certainly, yeah, mammals will get hairer in the winter. Really, it'll get thicker coats.

Speaker 3

I wonder if that explains my upper lip. A lot of people had this question, and I'm going to say their names right now. You ready, ready? Okay? Maya Price, Marissa Laws, Hannah M. Childers, and Jessica Starkman essentially said, why do we love to crunch so much? Why do we love a satisfying crunchy leaf? Do you stop on leaves crunchy leaves?

Speaker 4

Yes, I do.

Speaker 3

What do you think it is about us that likes that?

Speaker 5

I think it's the sound effect and the fact that we can do that knowing that we're not really doing any damage to anything. The leaves are dead there there. We're actually probably helped them out a little bit, just getting them that much closer to being decomposed. And it's so satisfying, isn't it just to hear that crunch? Yeah. I think it's the sound effect mostly, but I think it's also doing some good.

Speaker 3

I'm going to look up and see if, like there's a hashtag leaf crunch and see if, like you know, if they're pimple popper videos. There's gotta be someone just leaf stomping sound nerds. Can I recommend the instagram at leaf crunching. This is a bunch of nature based ASMR videos of crunching leaves and ice cracking underfoot in the

winter and snow squeaking. They only have one hundred and twenty followers as their research this, but I feel like y'all could surprise them and blow them up with demands for more leaf crunchy sounds. This question also is asked by so many people, including Megan Johnson and Ana Thompson, Bath, Bunny Art, Julie Bear, Maren Mossman, Nikki Finger, Heather Dunsmore, ken Lee Wallace, Live Schaeffer, Henna and Savannah, Kate Stumps, and Carrie Lee Hessman all asked why does fall smell

so good? What is it about the smell that is so crisp and nostalgic and it just is something that you want to huff. Why do leaf smell like that?

Speaker 5

It's the microorganisms, really, yeah, I'm pretty sure because it's the same thing how rain smells like something, even though it's just water falling from the sky, but it's kind of enlivening microorganisms in the ground and all of this.

So fall is a similar kind of thing where you have it's really you know, you do have some of those rotting leaves you have, Yeah, just that seasonal shift where things are, things are dying, some things are coming to life because of it, like the decomposers out there, and so I think that's a big part of it.

Speaker 3

So I looked into this and who she was so right. So a few things are at play, and leaves are dying, they emit gases through pores on the surface, and those contain volatile organic compounds made of hydrogen and carbon that are similar to the oils found on the leaf surface. Now, if you're an antique book sniffer, you're also there for the volatile organic compounds. But on top of that, or rather I guess festering quietly underneath it, is a blanket

of fungus. Now, in particular, it might be Geotrichum candidum, and I'm pretty sure that name means white hair of the earth. But it rots plants and its burps smell like fall. Now there's also something called geosmine. This is the metabolite byproduct of a different microscopic crater, and it's the stuff that makes the smell of rain on the ground so perfect. That smell, by the bye has a name.

It's called petrocore. Over fifty years ago, two chemists, Isabel Bear and R. G. Thomas put a name to that smell of rain drops hating the dry ground, and petrocore means stone and blood of the gods, So it's the smell of the blood of the earth. Oh, such a beautiful notion. You'll get goosebumps under your sensible fall fleece. But that's not all that smells good.

Speaker 5

I mean in addition to pumpkin spice latte. But I think we're talking more about believes.

Speaker 3

Oh, we got a lot of questions about that. And in fact, Casey Wright wants to know which camp are you? Pumpkin spice or apple cider?

Speaker 5

Apple cider?

Speaker 3

Really any reason? In particular?

Speaker 5

Well, I do love pumpkin spice in it's truest sense of the spices that you put in the pumpkin pie.

Speaker 3

Yeah, what spices even? Are they? Okay? Cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, clove, and allspice. Wait, isn't all spice just the name of all those spices put together? No, allspice is its own thing. It comes from a Jamaican pimento tree, and it's the dried, unripe fruit. And it's only called allspice because it tastes like a blend of the other fall spices. Also, it's used in Cincinnati chili, which is a very terrifying culinary chimera of chili and spaghetti. Cincinnati, I love you, but

this dish confounds me. It's like a centaur or a half person, half octopus, and the octopus legs are spaghetti noodles and then the top half is a chili brain. What is happening? Please don't at me. I say this with love, with awe, with concern anyway, pumpkin spice, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves offspice.

Speaker 5

And things like that. Less so in the syrupy, goopy form of pumpkin spice.

Speaker 3

Okay, what about like pumpkin spice candles And there's all manner. I'm sure that there's like an axe body spray that's like autumnal man. Yeah.

Speaker 5

I feel like in those kind of ways, Apple's a little fresher and I'm on Apple Team Apple.

Speaker 3

Okay. I blame myself because when I put up this Patreon question, I think I added something about pumpkin spice in the question the call for questions, because literally that was asked by el McCall, Jessica Randolph, Shannon Palmer, Aki Rott Todd Peterson, Christa Evanpado, Jenny Hoover, Brandon McKenna, and Liv Schaeffer all asked about pumpkin and spice lattes and why you think that companies push pumpkin spice flavors so much When apple cider is equally perfect. Why is it?

Do you think? Do you think it's just do you think that they know that we're horny for seasons?

Speaker 5

Yes, and that nostalgia And even though we're in southern California where it is one hundred degrees right now and they're pushing pumpkin spice lattes on us, I think it is that nostalgia for our romantic idea of fall in the north and the leaves changing colors and the fireplace crackling away in the corner, and our sweaters on and all of that. I think it's, yeah, just really tapping into that primal feelings of seasons humans.

Speaker 3

Brendan Dean wants to know as leaves start to change color, does it change how effective photosynthesis is?

Speaker 4

Absolutely? Okay, yep.

Speaker 5

So the more they change color, the less green they are than the less effective they are at photosynthesizing.

Speaker 3

Which is kind of their point, right They're like, We're we're good. We got some stored up a bunch of people. Kylie Sue Casey Wright Ellen Boss also wanted answers and confirmation that they don't have to rake their lawns. Does rehee leave leaves remove nutrients from the trees.

Speaker 5

It doesn't remove them from the trees directly, but it does take them from this from what would be in the soil, which therefore then makes less a bit makes less nutrients available for the trees later on, So indirectly, Yes.

Speaker 3

So if it's not a fire hazard, Willia Mumba leave the leaves killer? So easy to remember. So many people had questions about how trees change colors. Evan jud Jasmine Wells, Melanie Baker, Noah Gonzalez, Marian Moss, Megan daw Heather d Van Walkenberg, Great Name, Leanna Schuster, Christine Chapman, McKenna Larson, Robin Louden, and Daletka tomorrow Man, Karen Burnham, Colleini me Juan Pedro Martinez and See Murphy all asked about. There's a lot of people curious about this. Evan Jude's words,

who was a first time question asker. Why do the same species of trees in the same area turn different colors? For instance, one maple in my art turns red, but the other turns yellow. Is it genetic? Why does it vary so much?

Speaker 5

My guess is that even the two maples in his backyard are different species. They might really kind of similar when they're green and fully leafed out, but my guess is that they're a different species. It is possible for there to be slight variation within a species, for sure, and I'd be curious to see his sleeves and how they're changing colors and to know if that's happening every

single year. And the other thing too, is that some trees will change colors more than once in a way, so they'll i mean, they'll start off green and then maybe they'll go to like an orange color and then they'll turn redder or something like that. So it could

be like a gradient of change that happens. So it could also be that one of those trees is further along than the other, and then I would guess the other one could catch up, and then they'll both kind of be on the same color scheme, just at a slightly different timeline.

Speaker 4

I'm sorry, I'm light.

Speaker 3

Yeah, why would one change earlier? Would one maybe have less water in the roots or.

Speaker 5

Yeah, it could be something like that one is more stressed for one reason or another, maybe getting less water. It could be that one is a little bit older and more established and therefore has more, a larger root system and more access to water. One could be in a slightly shadier area, could be under the eve of

the house. It could be in the shade of a larger tree, whereas one is getting more sun and therefore thinking that it's still a little bit more summary than the one who's in the shade of a structure or something, and I think it's further along into the fall. So there are lots of even of those kind of like microhabitat reasons that could influence why one tree is reacting differently than another.

Speaker 3

Do you have to worry about that when you're looking through historical data, Like what if this person says that this tree flowered early, but the tree just had a better spa in the yard.

Speaker 5

Oh, that's totally a part of it. And that's why having tons of data will help shake out some of those patterns. When we're out looking for let's say, the earliest flower of a particular species, will try to find the warmest places, maybe the sunniest places, maybe the places that are a little bit more sheltered from winds and things like that, and that would be our first data point that we're actually seeking out. That first one.

Speaker 3

Oh, so of the most optimal conditions.

Speaker 5

Yeah, right, And it's similar for even people who are bird watching. It's really that first first bird of the spring that you're interested in recording, even though that mass of birds might not show up for another week or two. So that first one is often what we're after. Although statistically sometimes that mass or the full peak is what is most biologically important. Historically, sometimes it's that first one that people are actually recording.

Speaker 3

Oh wow, so it's like the winner of a marathon versus like the median time it took to finish that race exactly. Ah, that's so interesting. Caitlin Pointexter wants to know, are there any indoor place ants that change colors with the seasons.

Speaker 5

Well, most of our indoor plants are often tropical or some tropical kind of plants that we just have indoors. They're not necessarily plants that are native to your area, so, and we do like them to remain green all the time.

Speaker 3

Yeah, that's true. We're like, unless you're into orchids, in which case you're just I feel like people who like orchids could deal with cats. It's just like it doesn't like me sometimes, and that's Okay, yeah, that's true. A lot of returns that happen in October. This is plant died. Like, Yeah, dude, Chrisper wants to know if there's a place that's autumn all year round because his allergies are better there. No, no, not that I'm aware of.

Speaker 5

I mean some places, like even in southern California, there are places that are just seventy degrees all the time. But it's more eternal spring, i'd say, than eternal autumn.

Speaker 3

Yeah. I guess you could just get a holow deck like they had in Star Trek and just you know, be bop, be pop it's fall. A few people Areas Costello, Kunniy Halberson, and Eva all asked about SAYAD seasonal effective disorder. Do SAD lamps really work or should I spend my money on wine to keep me cheerful? Areas Costello wants to know.

Speaker 4

I'd say do both.

Speaker 5

Okay, I'm not totally up on the SAD literature, but I do believe that we are that we do better in light sometimes, or at least certain of us do better in light and feel more energized when there is more light out. So if that works for you, then totally get a sad lamp and sip some wine while you're in front of it.

Speaker 3

For more remedies for SAD, I went to the source, doctor Norman Rosenthal dot com. Remember this is the guy who was instrumental in describing and naming seasonal affective disorder, and he's also afflicted with it himself, so he knows his stuff now. His website recommends getting outside on winter mornings into the sunlight or having indoor light boxes to

supplement light. Exercise like a nice morning walk or a dance club or regular trips to the gym also helps, so does watching your diet and avoiding sugar and starch binges. Talk therapy helps. Winter vacations to a sunnier spot if you can, antidepressants if need be, and if all else fails, just move. Just pick up your life and move. Snowbirds in Florida are like, Hey, we may be overrun with questionable tattoos in feral iguanas, but we are living life

down here year round. They don't call it the Sunshine State for nothing, anyway. Speaking of which, Erica asked about sky color. I've always thought that a clear autumn sky is a particular shade of blue, and I can see it getting closer to that shade in September. Is this real or is this just confirmation bias? I live in western Pennsylvania. If that's relevant, Does the sky change color?

Speaker 5

I believe that it could, because there could be different levels of humidity in the air. For example, So in the spring, let's say there's a lot of rain and it's more humid or cloudier or something like that, and so the sky itself might be might appear to be a different color because the ad your is more dense with what are molecules that kind of thing, And then right in the fall, maybe it's dryer and it's just a different shade of blue. I would totally believe that.

I'd also say that it's possible that the juxposition of the sky against whatever else it is that you're looking at, especially if it's some nice orange leaves or some bare branches, that that might appear different than blue sky against a tree a full tree of green leaves. So I think it could be related to all of those things.

Speaker 3

Yeah, damn good answer. Any songs about September or October that you like. I keep thinking of waking up when September Ends or Pale September by Phone Apple.

Speaker 5

I really should have like some kind of Phenology playlist going.

Speaker 3

You really should? I know? Different sasonal ones? Yeah, Spotify it up, send me a link. Let us not forget about the classic standard Autumn Leaves. Another classic the GNR ballad November Rain, which I wish we're called Autumn petrokore yum yuns. There's also Sweater Weather by the Neighborhood Yola Tango's Autumn Sweater Tangentially related is Weezer's Undone the Sweater Song or Neil Young's Harvest Moon. I guess ed Sheeron has a song called Autumn Leaves Why Cliffe John's Got

Gone to November? Morrissey's November Spawnded a Monster, which I thought, in hyper self awareness might be autobiographical, but no, Morrissey is a May baby. And of course the Green Day plea to sit the Pumpkin spice back to school ramp out out, asking only for us to wake them up on Septemberance Billy Joe Armstrong vocalist for Green Day, his

birthdays in February makes sense. Sydney B wants to know why do some areas have a false fall where their weather gets cozy and fall esk and then jumps back to summer for a few more days. Signed a bitter Hoosier who just wants it to be autumn. Dang it, does that tend to happen? Is that a new climate change phenomenon or is that always kind of happened.

Speaker 4

It's always kind of happened to some ex stent.

Speaker 5

I think now we're a little bit more attuned to it, just because maybe that jump back to summer used to be a few degrees now maybe it's a few more degrees. Or maybe we're just extra sick of summer because it's been so hot and dry for so long that we're extra ready for some cooler weather. But those seasonal changes are notoriously bumpy. Even in the spring, you'll have some warm spring days and then all of a sudden it'll drop all of phrasing for a couple of days and

then warm back up again. So those seasonal changes are pretty are pretty common and have been going on for a long time.

Speaker 3

Okay, yeah, that makes sense because there's always those April snowstorms that New Yorkers are like, how dare you so? Yeah, that makes sense, Madeline Winter of All Names says, where I am in Victoria, Australia, indigenous communities recognize six distinct seasons in the exact same climate, where my own culture recognizes only four. Is this a common situation in other places if you.

Speaker 5

Go back far enough in other cultures, Yeah, they certainly have other ways of recognizing seasons, which is often very phenologically based in a way, because they would recognize a certain plant that has started to grow, sort an animal that has arrived in sex doing something, and so their

seasons will be based on that. And I know in Japan, for example, they've been studying the seasons for way longer than a lot of other places in the world and making written notes about this, and so we have records from Japan that go back to the ninth century. Oh my God of phonology. And this is actual data that we've been using in scientific research to understand long term phonology trends.

Speaker 3

Do you ever have to go back in archives and study like haiku that have something to do with the seasonal changes.

Speaker 5

I haven't studied Haiku's exactly, but in the Japanese work, for example, yeah, you would be looking at old court documents where they said something like the cherry blossoms were in full bloom today and we had our citywide party under the cherry trees and so things like that are real data, especially for cherry trees where they're only flowering for a couple of days and so we yeah, so we're looking at anything.

Speaker 3

I feel like people have to dig up the old grandma's postcards being like, well, the rhododendron flower today, and they're like helpful information. Moving along, a lot of people asked about migration. Hh Slevnik, Anna Thompson, Michelle Yee, Tyana Heigert, Eric Sodters, Enrique Sarmiento, Madeline Rodgers, I've been Krutt, Chelsea, Alison Warren, oj Carrasco, Charlotte fieikergerd I hope I said

that right. McKenna, Larsen and Jesse Cole all want to know why do some species of birds migrate and others don't need to? What's happening there?

Speaker 5

Yeah, so similar to trees and what they're however, tree is doing something different. Lots of bird species do different things, and it's all what is evolutionarily successful for them, and so when in even some of the research I was doing.

We were looking at historic records from the rose time, for example, and we found that in the last one hundred and fifty years or so, some species that used to migrate no longer migrate because it's warm enough in Massachusetts for them to just stick around all year.

Speaker 3

WHOA.

Speaker 5

So even those kind of things that we think are really ingrained and a species can change if the conditions change, and that's a good sign in a sense that that species might be adaptable to something like climate change. So it really depends on food resources is for most species what it comes down to and why they might migrate.

That in addition to finding their own niche. So not all species can exist in that perfectly habitable place all year round, and so some have been able to find their niche way up in the Arctic, but they can only be in the Arctic for a couple of months in the summer, so then they might have to fly down to somewhere warmer for their winters where they can have their own niche there. And so it's finding your niche and getting the food resources that you need.

Speaker 3

So to find your niche, go where there's food and sex that people will let you have, So just keep traveling around until you're full of onion rings and spinach dip and an adult person consensually lets you get nude with them. That's where you belong. Someone does not want to mate with you. Keep it moving. A lot of folks asked about climate records, and Jessica Friz asks who are some of ye old superheroes of recording seasonal data

whose records are still useful to us today. A few other people asked about throw in this Vein the following folks asked about ye old journaling superheroes and also about helping scientists record phenological data, and they are I will say them with my mouth, Elaine Barr, Ellen Voss, Ellen, Silva Allen, Captana Glue, Julie Bear, Shalise Quinlan, Michelle Mooey and Booboo Rock Sound and and also community science aka citizen science And how important is that in what you do?

Speaker 5

Yeah, so the Row is definitely a hero, although Leopold also made great observations of the plants and animals around him, and so we've been able to use those records, and Japanese recorders of phenological data are huge heroes and that's been going on for centuries, So very cool And.

Speaker 4

What was scart that question?

Speaker 3

Oh, citizen science? Yeah, community and citizen science. How much can people help?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 5

So I came into the world of community science when doing my doctoral research and realized that I was unable to be all over New England recording first beef out of every tree out there, and so we developed a project to engage the public in helping us do that and recording leaf out on the trees that they had around them, and so that was hugely helpful and really gave us a sense a picture of when and how leaves were leafing out around the Northeast. So you two

can do that. And there are lots of projects out there. The National Phonology Network is a good one in the United States. Project Budburst I think it's just called Budburst now is another one that is really accepting of people's observations. So there are also lots of local ones too.

Speaker 3

And has it changed it all that it's now community science as opposed to citizen So here where I work.

Speaker 5

We've had an institutional change from citizens science the community science to be more inclusive, but nationally and internationally it is still more widely recognized as citizen science.

Speaker 3

Yes, so once called citizen science, it's making a shift toward community science. So if you're looking to get involved and help out search for both of those terms. Leanna Schuster wants to know what about the migration of butterflies. I've always loved monarchs and have read about their migratory patterns and loss of wintering grounds in Mexico. Do other butterflies seasonally migrate? How screwed are the monarchs by climate change and habitat loss?

Speaker 5

Yeah, monarchs and of other butterflies are supremely screwed. Okay, And monarchs are one of the more charismatic species and so we have lots of great data on them, and so we are really ware aware of their migration and migratory patterns. So that's kind of let us know that. Yeah, that's in certain years especially, the numbers have been pretty low, and that's cause for alarm. But making those observations of when you see butterflies in your backyard and all of

that is important for us to know. And as citizen scientists or community scientists, we encourage people to do those things and to make contributions of those data so that we can understand more about where those butterflies are and what they're doing, because we could only be in so many places at one time.

Speaker 3

And just like you and me and the person in your office who ate your leftover pad tie without asking, butterflies gotta eat. And native plants help as well.

Speaker 5

Yeah, definitely, like milkleed. Planting a species of milk weed that's local to your area and really help the monarchs and give them a place to munch on some meali milgreed and.

Speaker 4

To do what they need to do.

Speaker 5

But each butterfly species has different host plants, so finding out what butterfly species are local to you and planning those plants can be a real help.

Speaker 3

Not to mention as a butterfly party in your backyard. Like yeah, Julie Maher wants to know if you can elaborate on the technology that's being used in phonology field studies like drones, tagging data sets, simulations. How is it changing with technology?

Speaker 5

Yeah, hugely, And so we've gone from we meaning phonologists of the past, have gone from pen and paper kind of just making observations of what we see to now being able to automate that more with things like phenocams, where maybe you have a tower with a camera on it that's pointed out over the forest, and you could watch that forest green up over the spring and into the summer, and then you could watch leaves change color

and die off in the fall. And that would be at a landscape scale, which is so much different than looking at it plant by plant and gives us a whole different kind of data to work with. The plant

by plant is also really important and really interesting. We could also get phonology data from satellite images, where if you have an aerial image of a whole area, you can or a computer program will count essentially how many green pixels and leaf color pixels are in that image, and how that image has changed over time from week to week or even day to day, and we could watch that area green up.

Speaker 3

Essentially someone else counting the pixels.

Speaker 4

Yeah, so helpful.

Speaker 5

Another thing too, that's kind of really at the forefront of phonology is machine learning and our ability to look at images, either photographs or orbarium specimens, and to programmatically quantify a particular phenological state that is in that image

without a human even having to look at it. So we could feed thousands of herbarium specimens into this image processing system and it could tell us which of those specimens are in flower or in fruit, and that saves us as humans from having to look at all of those specimens. And don't get me wrong, it's a ton of fun to look at orbarium specimens and to go around and to see them in person. But it does

limit what you're able to do. You can't do things at a national or global scale, but you can if it's been automated in that way.

Speaker 3

This next topic was requested by listener Katie Pinnett, who asked, is there any way to preserve the color in leaves once they fall? I'm an artist and haven't found a good way online to preserve them where they don't fade relatively quickly. Do you have a leaf collection?

Speaker 5

H randomly, I have like all tons of books with leaves just shoved into them.

Speaker 3

What is the best way to preserve a leaf?

Speaker 5

Leaves are actually really easy and plants are pretty easy to just like anybody could slip it in between sheets of a newspaper pages of a newspaper. I would recommend laying them out flat and as thin as possible. So

if you take a whole branch of something. You want it to not be more than just a leaf thick ideally, or a couple of leaves stick if you have to, and displaying there's a flower on it, for example, to display all the pedals spread out instead of just smushed, because however, it smushes down the first time, that's how it's going to be forever. And then you could put

it under some books in a dryish place. If you have a heater or something you know that's in your house, just put it near there for I'd say a week or two, and then there you have a little pressplit.

Speaker 3

Is there a good way to preserve the color on it? Or is it like it's color is gonna fade.

Speaker 5

Color's going to fade almost no matter what. Certain species do preserve better than others, but there's more likely than not going to be some feeding.

Speaker 3

I feel like if you're doing that to help the future generations, you should just have a pantone wheel and try to match what color it wasn't it was fresh. It's just like, yo, do you guys ever have to use the pantone wheel? I wish Pantone, by the way, is so named because its inventor Lawrence Herbert, who worked at a printing company, wanted to standardize colors and capture them all under one system. So pan means all and

tone means color. Pantone all colors. I'm guessing other phonologists are also into it, because in a twenty sixteen article titled it was a Great Green Year identification of a chlorophyll definalise that functions in chlorophyll turnover published in the Plant Cell Journal, opens with this sentence. Green may have been the Pantone color of the year for twenty thirteen, but twenty sixteen was a great year for articles on

chlorophyll research at the Plant Cell and beyond. But instead of staring at color chips at your desk, you could get outside and see them yourself. A few people had this question, Robin Cohen, Kayla Kelly, el McCall, Francina Martinez, Christina Weaver, Andrew Bayne, Kyla Kelly All kind of asked about geography and about New England. Where is the most beautiful place to enjoy fall foliage. Yeah?

Speaker 5

Yeah, go into the mountains where the air is crisp. You can get some hot cider, leave some cider donuts, some apples, enjoy the foliage, and I'd say don't overlook some of the higher altitude places for some nice phonology. And if you live in a place that you know might have some places that are above treeline to have some nice alpine plants and flowers that are changing colors in potentially more subtle ways. But get on your knees and check them out.

Speaker 3

Does Vermont rule when it comes to fall color switching.

Speaker 4

Or you can't beat New England?

Speaker 3

Okay?

Speaker 4

Really? Yeah? Vermont, New Hampshire main, Yeah.

Speaker 3

All up in there. What's the best time a year ago?

Speaker 4

October? Usually okay?

Speaker 5

And there are some websites that will kind of like estimate and predict the best time for a peak fall foliage, which is, you know, essentially a phonology calculator, and so you can can plan your trips around that.

Speaker 3

Well. So leaf peepers look for fall foliage maps that let you know when the peak viewing times are. You can just bust out the ugs, bring a sweater if it gets cooler than like seventy last questions, I always ask, what's the shittiest thing about phonology, what's the worst thing about your job? What's annoying.

Speaker 5

Yeah, the shittiest thing about phonology. I guess there are a couple and I'm sure everybody says this, but it's the desk work. Yeah, you know, we all got into this to be outside and just in the nature, and then here we are doing emails all day.

Speaker 3

I don't think either of us were expecting this next part to go the way that it did, so I'm just going to leave it all in uncut. It's one of the most candid and powerful messages I have ever heard from a scientist.

Speaker 5

That and the fact that you know, there's a lot of bad news that comes with studying the natural world that just takes its toll. So, yeah, how do you get yourself out of that? Like, yeah, going in my backyard. Man, it's tough. It's so tough.

Speaker 3

I mean, there's a lot of bad news. I'm sorry, I'm sorry to ask. I get it. I mean literally, the world is burning. I mean it's straight up. Yeah, I mean, and there doesn't feel like a lot we can do one on one sometimes, you know.

Speaker 4

Right, Yeah, So yeah, if I knew good news out there.

Speaker 3

Yeah, is there anything that you feel like you can have in your control at all? Or does it feel hard because it feels out of your control?

Speaker 5

Yeah, it does feel out of control.

Speaker 3

I mean, and this is like from the mouth of someone who is knee deep in data about it. Does there ever feel like a way to have your work legitimized by people who don't want to believe it? Is that ever really hard to be? Like I've been working on this for like a decade, Like it's real?

Speaker 5

Yeah, And there's you know, there's it's such a weighted issue on occasion, especially in this country, to feel like, you know, is climate change real? Like the fact that we're still having that conversation, yeah, makes it feel like there's like this situation is not only not getting better, but we haven't even agreed that there's a situation that we should be addressing or should be paying attention to and like let alone doing the things that need to be done to make it better.

Speaker 3

And just feels like it's a long uphill climb, Yeah, before we even get to the battleground.

Speaker 5

Right, And yeah, and not only are we not addressing climate change, but we are as a country anyway kind of rolling back the systems that we have in place, the checks and balances that we have in place, to keep natural places preserved for the future, and to help you keep the water clean and the air clean.

Speaker 4

Like we're rolling all of those back.

Speaker 5

So not only are we not moving forward, but in some cases we're kind of moving backwards.

Speaker 3

Yeah. Yeah, Every single day in the news, you're like, are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 5

Yeah. I can't listen to NPR on my commute anymore without coming in with like red eyes and like inability to function.

Speaker 3

I think it's really important that people know that how real this is, you know.

Speaker 5

Yeah, real and and pressing yeah yeah, And also that the real people who are working on it.

Speaker 3

See things so much sooner than the general public does. And to to be one of the people at the forefront collecting the data, seeing how it's changing, seeing how dire it is, and the warnings aren't even being heard.

Speaker 5

Yeah, And I think people it's all of that right, And I think a lot of people data don't mean the same thing that it means to somebody who's spending their days with it. And I get that. I don't expect everybody to be knee deep in the scientific literature to understand what's happening with climate change and I certainly don't know anything that's happening with climate change or so many of the environmental issues that are going on right now.

But I think the fact that there's not even trust for scientists and the people that are doing this that doesn't help us any if there were at least an acknowledgment that hey, I don't need to understand everything you're doing, I don't need to understand all the data, but I trust what you're saying, and Okay, let's take action because of what you are contributing to this conversation, Like, that's valuable,

and so let's do something about that. I think that would be an important step forward to recognize that, yeah, that that data means something, and that there are people that are thinking a lot about it.

Speaker 3

It's just truth versus money at this point.

Speaker 4

Oh so much. Yeah, yeah, that's what they say.

Speaker 5

The You know, we could study climate change all we want, but really we have to kind of get through the capitalist greed to really work on it, to really address the problem. All the data in the world about every critter on the planet won't help us. It's you know, getting through the greed.

Speaker 3

Do you have a favorite thing about your job?

Speaker 5

Yeah, getting outside, but seeing new places, meeting new plants and animals keeps me going.

Speaker 3

Is there a favorite moment you've had outside? Oh, let's see make you cry again? Probably it's a big beautiful world out there.

Speaker 4

Yeah, for now, I've.

Speaker 5

I've been able to travel to Kenya and Costa Rica and in South America and seen yeah, like national geographic scenery and that keeps me going.

Speaker 3

Yeah. Oh no, no, no, you're you're fine, You're fine. So just kind of remembering how beautiful the world is, how many critters there are in it right now. There might be some in your backyard just munching on a seed.

Speaker 4

Check them out.

Speaker 3

In terms of what you would leave at the kind of like legacy, the kind of work that you want to do. Is there a big picture goal for you that you'll that kind of keeps you going every.

Speaker 5

Day When we think about taking action towards emulerating climate change, that.

Speaker 4

Yeah, I guess.

Speaker 5

I hope my work could be applied to positive action. And you know, a lot of it is kind of esoteric in that sense where it's not like do X y Z and it's all going to be fixed. It's really kind of like bird by bird and plant by plant, which only speaks to so much of the problem, but just being that drop in the bucket with all the other scientific literature out there that is pointing in the same direction, I think that's helpful to know about it.

Speaker 3

That's super important. I think anyone who's listening who wants to help now knowing that there's community science and citizen science programs out there where just their love of being in nature and making observations is helping people like you that can't be in fifty places at once. Like that's such a powerful thing to be able to be a part of you know.

Speaker 4

Oh, that's huge.

Speaker 5

Yeah, recommend people doing all the community science they possibly can. It contributes data which we use all the time for the work that we do, and also then gives people a deeper appreciation for the natural world, and so when they when it comes down for them to vote, they're more informed and more curious and interested in those sides

of the issues that are really often overlooked. Or we kind of make that decision with our wallet and maybe be like, oh, I want my taxes a guip a dollar to like put in a public transportation system or things like that, and understanding more parts of the more pieces of the puzzle from the natural world, I think will or can influence how people vote.

Speaker 3

Thank you so much for doing this. It's such It's so many warm fuzzies and so many like cold chill goose bumps at the same time.

Speaker 4

Thank you. I could talk about this stuff all very long.

Speaker 3

Well season long. Thank you for doing what you're doing.

Speaker 4

Thank you.

Speaker 3

You're the best. So ask the smartest folks the stupidest questions, and you may get answers that will get you, that will inspire you, that will change your life, that'll change the way you huff a leaf pile or stare at the trees on a walk, and it just might get you to help these scientists gather more data and keep fighting the good fight. So to follow doctor Libby Elwood,

and you should. She's at Libby Elwood on Twitter, and there are resources in the show notes and up at aliward dot com slash ologies slash phonology with the sponsor links and the codes the conservation organization that got a donation this episode and links to Libby's work. So ologies is at ologies on Twitter and Instagram. I'm at Ali Ward with one L on both. Thank you to Shannon Felts and Bonnie Dutch of the comedy podcast You Are

That for managing all that merch. Thank you Aaron Talbert and Hannehalippo for admitting the Ologies podcast Facebook group, which just hit ten thousand nice people, so join into that if you feel like chatting science with some fellow Ologites.

Thank you to Jared Sleeper of the mental health podcast Make Good, Bad Brain for the assistant editing and for the extra research help this week, and of course to the Pumpkin Spice Center lattes, Stephen Ray Morris of the per Cast and see Jurassic Wright who helps stitch together all these clips every week. Nick Thorburn wrote the theme song and he is in a wonderful band called Islands. And if you listen to the end of the show, you know I tell you a secret. And the secret

this week it's a pro tip of fall beverages. If you're making a chi latte on top, crack a little fresh black pepper, add a sprinkle of cayenne hot Damn you get spicy your business. So just a little tip for mole pops, maybe pumpkin and apple cider take a little back seat. Let chilie the way this year. Also, I know this episode was hard to hear, so please help scientists. Help people in your community register to vote, get to the polls. It matters, all right. Next week

the start of Spooktober. So there are five Tuesdays in October, which means five spooky episodes coming up in the next month. I can't even deal. Next Tuesday, you ready an episode on bones, that's right, skeletons, skellies, that's up next. Okay, bye bye, pacodermatology, hobbiology from do zoology, lithology, zechnology, meteorology, paratology, anthology, zeriology, elatology. Hop in spice, he's my ride, ye,

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