2018 ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10)

COS 15 - Phenology

Monday, August 6, 2018: 1:30 PM-5:00 PM
R05, New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center
1:30 PM
Quantifying asynchronous species-specific canopy leaf phenology using camera-mounted UAV images
John Y. Park, University of Florida; Sami Walid Rifai, University of Oxford; Jonathan Dandois, Towson University; Jeremy W. Lichstein, University of Florida; Helene Muller-Landau, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Stephanie Bohlman, University of Florida
1:50 PM
Thermal pace-of-life strategies improve phenological predictions in ectotherms
Quentin Struelens, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne Universités, UMR EGCE; François Rebaudo, UMR EGCE; Reinaldo Quispe, PROINPA; Olivier Dangles, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), UMR EGCE
2:10 PM
Phenotypic, but not genotypic, selection on flowering time in a perennial herb
Elsa Fogelström, Stockholm University; Johan Ehrlén, Stockholm University
2:30 PM
Precipitation variability at multiple time scales drives phenological variation in seasonally dry tropical forests
Naomi B. Schwartz, University of Minnesota; Xue Feng, University of Minnesota; Jennifer S. Powers, University of Minnesota
2:50 PM
Fire affects flowering phenology and reproductive success in two tallgrass prairie forbs
Lea Richardson, Northwestern University, Chicago Botanic Garden; Stuart Wagenius, Chicago Botanic Garden
3:10 PM
3:20 PM
The influence of data type, functional traits, and ecoregion on native bee phenology
Joan M. Meiners, University of Florida; Michael C. Orr, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Kristina Riemer, University of Florida; Shawn Taylor, University of Florida; Terry L. Griswold, USDA-ARS
3:40 PM
The effects of chilling and forcing temperatures on spring synchrony for larch casebearer and tamarack
Claudia Nanninga, University of Minnesota; Samuel J. Fahrner, University of Minnesota; Rebecca Montgomery, University of Minnesota; Brian H. Aukema, University of Minnesota
4:20 PM
Multi-year rainfall manipulation effects on grass and shrub phenology
Courtney M. Currier, Arizona State University; Osvaldo E. Sala, Arizona State University
4:40 PM
Does shifting phenology early in ontogeny affect growth and development in subsequent stages?
Hilary B. Rollins, Case Western Reserve University; Michael F. Benard, Case Western Reserve University
See more of: Contributed Talks