articleScienceMay 31, 2002Closed access

Rapid Changes in Flowering Time in British Plants

University of York · MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The average first flowering date of 385 British plant species has advanced by 4.5 days during the past decade compared with the previous four decades: 16% of species flowered significantly earlier in the 1990s than previously, with an average advancement of 15 days in a decade. Ten species (3%) flowered significantly later in the 1990s than previously. These data reveal the strongest biological signal yet of climatic change. Flowering is especially sensitive to the temperature in the previous month, and spring-flowering species are most responsive. However, large interspecific differences in this response will affect both the structure of plant communities and gene flow between species as climate warms.…

Citation impact

1,436
total citations
FWCI
53.31
Percentile
100%
References
31
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Perennial plant
  • Biology
  • Interspecific competition
  • Climate change
  • Gene flow
  • Botany
  • Ecology
  • Gene
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Climate action
No related works found for this paper.