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Thoreau Journals Reveal Climate Change In Massachusetts And Beyond, Study Says

First Posted: 03/12/2012 7:25 am Updated: 03/12/2012 7:25 am

Thoreau

By: Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer
Published: 03/09/2012 12:11 PM EST on LiveScience

Springtime in Concord, Mass., has changed since the town was home to Henry David Thoreau, and the writer himself has helped scientists figure out how.

So have other naturalists, whose written records of the plants and animals around them  have helped researchers decipher how climate change has affected eastern Massachusetts and beyond.

Beginning in 1851, Thoreau scribbled records of the timing of the first spring flower blooms in his journals.

A century and a half later, Richard Primack, a professor of biology at Boston University, and his then-graduate student, Abe Miller-Rushing, followed in the writer's footsteps, observing the habits of the same species. [Gallery: Signs of Early Spring in Brooklyn]

An analysis of Thoreau's observations, those of another 19th-century naturalist and their own modern records indicate the first flowering date for 43 of the most common species has moved up by an average of 10 days. What's more, species that aren't shifting their flowering times in response to warmer springs are disappearing.

"Even though the world around us has changed quite a bit we were able to do roughly the same fieldwork he did," said Miller-Rushing, who is now the science coordinator for the Schoodic Education and Research Center, Acadia National Park, in Maine. "He couldn't possibly have been thinking about the things we are using his data for today."

Looking back

This research began with some historical detective work.

About 10 years ago, Primack decided to look for examples of how climate change was affecting the plants and animals in Massachusetts. At the time, little work had taken place in the eastern U.S., he said.

There are two well-documented ways in which plants and animals respond to climate change: They can shift their ranges, moving farther up a mountain side, for example; and they can shift the timing of seasonal events (called phenology), like blooming, leafing or migrations. Primack was mainly interested in the latter, though to get any sense of real change he'd need decades or more of data.

"Scientists by and large don't have the records we need to understand how a lot of these things are changing," Miller-Rushing said. "The records dog walkers or bird watchers or fishermen have been collecting can really add a lot of important information."

So, Primack and his students went looking for them. The first record they analyzed and published came from Kathleen Anderson, an amateur naturalist who recorded what she saw on her farm in Middleborough, Mass., for decades. Without knowing at the time, Anderson had documented progressively earlier spring activity in 22 of the 24 species as local average annual temperatures rose by 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) over 30 years, the researchers estimate.

150 years in Concord

Primack also tracked down an independent Thoreau scholar, Brad Dean, who had Thoreau's records of flowering dates in Concord.

"He said he was expecting a climate change biologist to contact him; he knew they were important," Primack said of the records, which given Thoreau's notoriously bad handwriting and his use of outdated plant names, required some deciphering.  

They had also located similar records kept by the botanist Alfred Hosmer, who followed in Thoreau's footsteps by recording flowering times around the turn of the 20th century.

Moving on up

The researchers looked at three years of their own data, ending in 2006, alongside Thoreau's and Hosmer's and found that 43 common species were flowering seven days earlier on average than they did in Thoreau's time. During this century and a half, Concord's average temperature warmed by 4.3 F (2.4 C).

Urban areas — like Boston's metropolitan area, to which Concord belongs — are warming faster than other places, thanks to the urban heat island effect, which happens when artificial surfaces, such as pavement and sidewalks, absorb heat during the day.

More recently, the researchers added data from 2008, 2009 and 2010 to the analysis (2010 brought the warmest April on record to the Boston area). The new analysis, published in the February 2012 issue of the journal BioScience, indicated an additional three-day advance, so the flowers now bloom 10 days earlier on average.

Primack noted that the flowers are following changes in temperature, so they tend to bloom earlier in warm springs, like 2010, and later in cool springs, like 2003. "The years are now, on average, just much warmer than in Thoreau's time," he said.

Observations made by volunteers tracking seasonal events for the USA National Phenological Network may corroborate some of Primack and Miller-Rushing's more recent results by suggesting trees in the region got their first leaves unusually early in 2010. [Citizen Scientists Chart Shifts in Seasons]

The consequences

The average advancements for Concord's spring flowers are only averages. Not all species are responding the same way to warmer springs ­— some adjust their timing and some don't.

Primack, Miller-Rushing and colleagues from Harvard University found that the species with inflexible flowering times were disappearing from Concord. For instance, in Thoreau's time, 21 species of orchids grew wild in Concord, and today it's only possible to find about six, Primack said.

"What that result tells us is climate change is not only affecting flowering time but also affecting the abundance of species in Concord," he said. "Warming temperature is causing some species to be winners and some species to be losers."

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Wynne Parry on Twitter @Wynne_Parry. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 03/09/2012 12:11 PM EST on LiveScience Springtime in Concord, Mass., has changed since the town was home to Henry David Thoreau, and the write...
By: Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 03/09/2012 12:11 PM EST on LiveScience Springtime in Concord, Mass., has changed since the town was home to Henry David Thoreau, and the write...
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
08:17 AM on 03/15/2012
If the preponderance of scientific, historical, and anecdotal data suggests that the world is warming, that it is warming due to carbon dioxide from fossil fuel combustion, and that this warming could have potentially catastrophic effects due to cascading sequences of ecological and economic failures, then the proper denialist, fossil fuel supporter response appears to be mockery, "crock-ery", attack, and diversion.

After all, quarterly profits are the entire reason why we exist, isn't it? Isn't short term profit the religion that drives modern America, the reason that we are all here? Isn't anything or anyone that questions the wisdom of the national corporatist consumer religion a socialist commie pinko liberal heathen?

I am, of course, being sarcastic.
ubrew12
that crazy uncle from Amarcord
12:56 PM on 03/14/2012
I challenge anyone to look at the three plots in these links, and think that this trend is going to get better before it gets worse. The three plots are for CO2, temperature, and sea level rise: and they are all rising exponentially. The longer we don't treat this disease, the more vertical those three curves are going to get, until Walden Pond, and Earth, are unrecognizable to us, much less Thoreau.
http://planetforlife.com/gwarm/glob1000.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperature_record_of_the_past_1000_years
http://climatecrock.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/kemp.jpg

On this issue I believe Thoreau would have asked: "What are you doing out there?"
08:39 AM on 03/14/2012
Banned from commenting because I disagree....WOW that what I call censorship!
06:23 AM on 03/14/2012
I have been nursing a southern pecan tree that is now three feet tall since I planted the pecan in 2009, here in the mid-Hudson Valley of upstate NY (I bring it indoors in winter). By the end of this year I will have to transfer it from the five gallon bucket to a 50 gallon garbage container on wheels. I may make it into a giant banzai! However, two years ago I was praying (I'm a Christian) and I had the distinct thought that my 2020 it would be able to survive here outdoors on it's own. The world has been getting warmer for the past 12,000 years and this area was once covered with ice a mile thick. Just thought this might be of interest to some reading here.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
07:09 AM on 03/14/2012
Just a hint: you probably want a bonsai tree, and definitely not a banzai tree.

At the end of the glaciation things certainly warmed up in the Hudson valley - but then they lingered rather constant for about 12,000 years (you can't be too much of a christian, otherwise that would be twice the age of the universe) - until starting to rise in the last 200 years.
07:25 AM on 03/14/2012
Christians do have a wide variety of beliefs about the age of the universe, actually. Why, some denominations even accept evolution!
03:35 PM on 03/14/2012
You are correct about "bonsai" I had to laugh at my mistake. One version of the Bible says that to God a thousand years is but the blinking of an eye. Since God has no physical eyes the reference must be to our eyes which take .11 of a second to blink. Our scientists believe the world is around 4.5 Billion Years, give or take, and if you take the six days that the Bible says God created the world in and divide them by .11 of a second and then multiply that number by 1,000 years you come up with around 4.5 Billion Years, give or take. No one is required to believe this but as a Christian I am free to believe it. Some seventy years ago Jesus told a woman in England that "All my followers know and love the simple rules I taught when I lived on earth as a man. Many of them would be confused by all the rules of your churches. In all things simplify!" (one of over 360 short teachings from the classic GOD CALLING edited by A. J. Russell). I'm not an expert on the exact number of years the ice age lasted but I'm willing to wait and see if my tree will survive outside in eight more years. Whether the country will is another matter.
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chrisd3
08:05 AM on 03/14/2012
"The world has been getting warmer for the past 12,000 years"

This is simply false. The post-glacial warming ended some 8,000 years ago, and the Earth has been gradually cooling since then:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Holocene_Temperature_Variations.png

"Just thought this might be of interest to some reading here"

Falsehoods are rarely of interest.
08:40 AM on 03/14/2012
Glad someone else relies on facts thank you Chris!
03:58 PM on 03/14/2012
If the earth is cooling then why are the Snows of Kilimanjaro almost gone? I had always wanted to climb to see them when I was a kid? The Glaciers are all but gone from Glacier National Park in Montana, and I have seen etchings from long ago of glaciers in Europe that are almost gone. I suppose it is possible that the northern hemisphere is warming while the entire earth is growing colder but Kilimanjaro is in the southern hemisphere. I'm no expert on the times, I was going to say "the last 100,000" but 12,000 seemed more reasonable. However, I'm willing to nurse my little tree along for eight years to see if it will survive here. I'm betting it will.
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lynniebaker
Cons have short term memories too.
04:59 AM on 03/14/2012
Heck, I thought all of the warm weather we are having this spring was due to the solar storm.
07:27 AM on 03/14/2012
Solar storms, impressive as they are, comprise a tiny fraction of the total power we get from sun.
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lynniebaker
Cons have short term memories too.
08:00 AM on 03/14/2012
Thank you for the education. God knows I need all I can get. I know I am being silly but maybe that tiny fraction is hitting my state :). We have record breaking warm weather today.
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
08:48 PM on 03/14/2012
Besides which, the winter here was plenty warm before the solar storm.

But note that it has been a very cold winter in Europe. The last couple of years, it was cold and snowy in most of the US, but not in Europe and Asia. It seems that the increased heat in the system is forcing the winter jet stream into more of a U-shaped pattern, just as predicted by the climate models.
09:45 PM on 03/13/2012
The earth gets warm and then it gets cold and then it gets warm and then it gets cold and then.....
ubrew12
that crazy uncle from Amarcord
10:20 PM on 03/13/2012
'and the wheels on the bus go round and round' THANKS Dr. Science!
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:09 AM on 03/18/2012
AHAHAHAHHAA...
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chrisd3
10:42 PM on 03/13/2012
Why?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
07:10 AM on 03/14/2012
God breathing, silly! I hear there's never a misunderstanding.
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JC2009USA
Everybody has an opinion
09:34 PM on 03/13/2012
I have always been a fan of Henry David Thoreau - a man with intellect, an observer and definitely a forward thinker ahead of his times... just proves that we can sometimes LEARN lessons from the past - as we move forward...with reason and understanding of what we are doing and the consequences of our actions...very important when it comes to our environment and survival.
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Barry W Tungseth
07:11 PM on 03/13/2012
I`m sure Rush Limbaugh will explain it to you all on his radio show. THAT should be interesting listening!
07:09 PM on 03/13/2012
he also said a dollar a day in pay was qute substantial...if that was in silver (it was) then that day is coming....got silver?
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a49ac
06:43 PM on 03/13/2012
So how is government going to regulate Mother Nature and evolution? Would the current federal government and its EPA have saved the Earth from the ice age? Get real, species come and go; have for billions of years-man is not that poweful. But enviroment certainly plays into the socialist agenda and take over of our lives.
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chrisd3
07:37 PM on 03/13/2012
"man is not that poweful"

Man is powerful enough to have increased the concentration of Earth's primary forcing greenhouse gas by 40%. Please give us your expert scientific explanation of why that can't possibly affect Earth's climate.
09:47 PM on 03/13/2012
Read Green Hell and you will learn about all the BS the commie EPA is doing
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keedyk87
08:41 PM on 03/13/2012
You have been sold out to China by our Politicians and Corporations and can't see it. They along with MOST of our major Media Corporations have made it a point to not mention it to you because I suspect they also have a lot of money invested in China. And the Politicians on both sides of the isle didn't bother to tell us about it either. When YOU realize what they have done it will be too late for you to do anything about it!
06:35 PM on 03/13/2012
I’ve kept track of when my crocuses bloom for decades. Its usually the first week of March. The earliest date was February 22nd. However, this year it was February 6th. I’m not gonna move to Florida when I retire. I’ll let Florida move to me.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:12 AM on 03/18/2012
I live in Toronto, Canada. The neighbor plants passion vines every spring. He won't have to this year, as they didn't die. They were still in bloom the week before Christmas, and they are budding now.
06:20 PM on 03/13/2012
In the early 1840s (you can look it up) the weekly newspaper in Farmville, Virginia ordered a new press from a foundry in the north. It was delivered on two oxcarts. When they got to the James River in early November, each cart was found to be too heavy for the ferry. But the ferryman told them to find lodging, as the river would freeze solid enough for them to cross in a couple of weeks--the freeze was quite reliable.

I have lived here, near that crossing, for 10 years, and the river has nvever come close to freezing.
09:49 PM on 03/13/2012
What about the mini ice age in 1815 when it snowed all sumer long in New England?!!!
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chrisd3
10:49 PM on 03/13/2012
What about it? What about a brief climate anomaly caused by a combination of low solar activity and the eruption of Mt Tambora sheds any doubt on any of this?
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:12 AM on 03/18/2012
What about my granny's boils?
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MyNinja
N.W.A. Ninjas With Aptitude
05:52 PM on 03/13/2012
What's up with that beard? It's all neck beard. That's gotta itch!!!
05:23 PM on 03/13/2012
Give it a rest people. Earth has warmed and cooled since the beginning of time, it will continue.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
06:55 PM on 03/13/2012
Yes, dear, but THIS time it's warming because of us, and it's warming at a rate not seen since before humans existed. Last time there was a comparable warming event, around 90% of life on earth died.
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rwgunn
Questioning a truth will not make it false.
08:11 PM on 03/13/2012
"Give it a rest people. Earth has warmed and cooled since the beginning of time, it will continue." -- Pseu An

But will man and/or his civilization be able to survive the change?
05:19 PM on 03/13/2012
HDT was visionary in many ways. He can teach us much if we are willing to learn.
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John Denson
08:52 PM on 03/13/2012
You are apparently not willing ...