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The Bloom Clock is a research and learning project
about flowering plants. The research component is aimed at creating
a language for discussing the bloom times of wildflowers and other
plants that is neutral in respect to climate, region, and
hemisphere. While the learning project aspect is aimed at helping
people identify plants using visual keys.
To participate, read the page on How to
Contribute, then go to the Contributors page and sign in,
and then start adding your records in either of two ways:
- Participants who know plants fairly well (including the
scientific names) can log bloom sightings on the current text-based clock or using the
Master List.
- Participants can also use the keys, which can help you
narrow down and identify plants through simple characteristics and
photographic images.
If you want to use the clock to identify a flower you saw
today, try using the Keys!
If you are interested in improving the clock or have questions
and comments about it, please join us on the Project Discussion
page.
What
are Bloom Clocks?
Bloom clocks are kept by gardeners, ecologists, and others to
record the time of year different plants are in bloom.
How are bloom clocks
helpful?
The data from bloom clocks tell us about both the plants
themselves, and the region in which a particular plant is
growing.
- Knowing when a plant blooms (relative to other plants) is
helpful for garden designers.
- Knowing when nectar-producing plants bloom is useful for
farmers, orchardists, and beekeepers who want to ensure a continual
supply of nectar.
- Knowing when wind-pollinated plants bloom can help those with
allergies (and the doctors that treat them) predict when pollen
will be a problem. A major example of this is that in most parts of
North America, goldenrods (showy, yellow flowers that don't cause
allergies) tend to bloom at the same time as ragweeds (which have
green, non-showy flowers, and do cause allergies).
- In Integrated Pest
Management (a strategy used by farmers and gardeners in pest
and disease control), bloom clocks can provide phenological cues which tell the farmer or
gardener when to look out for a certain pest. For example, if a
certain pest generally emerges at the same time as a particular
plant is blooming, the farmer or gardener will know to check
susceptible crops and plants for signs of the pest.
- Patterns in the variation of bloom times with temperature or
day length can reveal aspects of plant physiology and growth season
relevant to modeling plant response to the environment. Such models
help reveal seasonal roles plants play in microclimates and in
cycles of nutrients and water.
- Bloom times can be used as indicators for monitoring changes of
local and regional climate.
How can the Wikiversity Bloom Clock help support other Wikimedia
projects?
- For the Wikipedias and garden books on the Wikibooks, the bloom
clock data can eventually yield a "geographically neutral" language
for discussing the flowering times of plants, which will be helpful
in writing articles.
- For Wikimedia Commons, the visual interface pages can help
uploaders identify plants (by using DynamicPageLists for flowers of
certain colors and seasons).
How can a
bloom clock be created on Wikiversity?
If there are enough participants, all it should require is for
bloom watchers to note any plants they noticed to be in bloom on a
particular day, with information on their location specific enough
to determine the local growing degree days
and day length, which are the two factors plants respond to.
Precipitation reports may also be handy for some climates.
Each report can then be organized to reduce the effects of
anomalous data, allowing us to generate geographical "zones" that
can eventually be used when describing a plant's expected bloom
time in a particular region.
Data can be extrapolated any number of times. Many different
species can be used, because they can be correlated to the bloom
times of other species over time.
System
Hypothesis
- Plants may be classified into groups that can accurately
predict bloom dates according to geographical zones.
- There will be 2 sorts of zones for most plants: a day-length
zone and a growing-degree-day zone (gdd-zone).
- Some plants will not fit into this system.
Plant
behaviors
- Some plants bloom according to growing degree days
- Some plants bloom according to day length
- Some plants bloom according to other conditions
Methods
- Collect data
- Collate data
- Establish zones
Further
testing
- Check plant bloom times in areas not previously checked, but in
the same zones