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PHENOLOGY

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Journey North

http://www.learner.org/jnorth/
Journey North engages students in a global study of wildlife migration and seasonal change. K-12 students share their own field observations with classmates across North America. They track the coming of spring through the migration patterns of monarch butterflies, bald eagles, robins, hummingbirds, whooping cranes, and other birds and mammals; the budding of plants; changing sunlight; and other natural events. Find standards-based lesson plans, activities and information to help students make local observations and fit them into a global context.

Phenology
http://www.cablemuseum.org/pages/phenology/phenology.html
Wildflower phenology from the Cable Natural History Museum.

Phenology
http://www.uwgb.edu/biodiversity/phenology/index.htm
Enter phenology data or view data by month from 2000-2006. Maintained by the Cofrin Center for Biodiversity at UW-Green Bay.

Project BudBurst
http://www.windows.ucar.edu/citizen_science/budburst/ 
Project BudBurst engages the public in making careful observations of the phenophases such as first leafing, first flower, and first fruit ripening of a diversity of trees, shrubs, flowers and grasses in their local area.

USA National Phenology Network
http://www.usanpn.org/
Register to enter your phenological data, request plants for observation, and view data such as first leaf and first bloom dates.

Wisconsin Phenological Society
http://www4.uwm.edu/wps/
Find general information about the Wisconsin Phenological Society, a phenology observation guide, and a phenology reporting form.