How
Climate Change is Impacting Thoreau’s Walden Pond
By Tim
Radford
18
January, 2014
Walden,
where Henry David Thoreau planted beans on land that had yielded only
cinquefoil, blackberries, johnswort and sweet wild fruits, is
changing. The trees and shrubs around Walden Pond are now out on
average 18 days earlier than 150 years ago, when Thoreau made his
observations. And, according to U.S. scientists in the journal New
Phytologist,
native species could lose out to invasive shrubs such as the Japanese
barberry.
Concord,
MA, occupies a special place in America’s history: it was the site
of the first battle of the War of Independence in the eighteenth
century, and later it was immortalized by the writings of Thoreau.
But the nineteenth century author did more than publish elegant
observations of the natural economy. He also recorded the first
moment when leaves emerged on the trees around Walden Pond, near
Concord, and did so for five years between 1852 and 1860.
Caroline
Polgar, a student at Boston
University, decided to repeat his observations. What she found
was surprising: “all species—no exceptions—are leafing out
earlier now than they did in Thoreau’s time. On average, woody
plants in Concord leaf out 18 days earlier now.”
Between
2009 and 2013 she and her fellow author Amanda Gallinat made
observations of 43 woody plants in the region. They also tested 50
species by collecting dormant twigs and placing them in water to see
when leaves unfurled in unusually warm laboratory conditions.
“We
found compelling evidence that invasive shrubs such as Japanese
barberry are ready to leaf out quickly once they are exposed to warm
temperatures in the lab even in the middle of winter, whereas native
shrubs, like highbush blueberry, and native trees, like red maple,
need to go through a longer winter chilling period before they can
leaf out—and even then their response is slow,” said Gallinat.
“The
experiments show that as spring weather continues to warm, it will be
the invasive shrubs that will be best able to take advantage of the
changing conditions,” Gallinat concluded.
“We
see that climate
change is creating a whole new risk for native plants in
Concord,” said Richard Primack, a third author and professor
of biology at Boston University. ”Weather in New England is
unpredictable, and if plants leaf out early in warm years, they risk
having their leaves damaged by a surprise frost. But if plants wait
to leaf out until all chance of frost is lost, they may lose their
competitive advantage.”
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