Shoreline Plants

Plant Science &
Conservation

Garden Stories

Weather Whiplash

Is it Spring or Winter? Flowers Wage Their Bets

As if on cue, tiny green leaves peek out from the dark soil each spring, reaching for the sun.

But how do flowers know it鈥檚 spring? And can they detect real spring versus a warm spell when it鈥檚 still winter?

鈥淲ithin the context of 鈥榬easonable conditions鈥 plants are generally able to detect real spring from a false start,鈥 said Paul CaraDonna, Ph.D., a 91短视频 conservation scientist. 鈥淚t is important to keep in mind that plants have long dealt with variable and unpredictable environments. How they make a living right now is based on figuring that out over thousands of years.鈥

鈥淔iguring that out鈥 is at once complex and mysterious.

Plants sense the arrival of spring through photoperiod sensing, moisture, temperature cues, chilling requirements, and chemical signaling. As scientists continue to explore these complex mechanisms, recent breakthroughs stand out.

Crabapple (malus 鈥楢诲补尘蝉鈥)

Crabapple (Malus 鈥楢诲补尘蝉鈥)

Plant 鈥渢hermometer鈥 discovered

Unlike animals, plants lack a nervous system, but they have evolved sophisticated means to sense and respond to temperature changes.

An international team of scientists recently discovered a 鈥渢hermometer鈥 molecule in plants that can measure the temperature of the soil around them, which triggers spring budding, according to a 2016 study published in the journal Science.

Stems act like fiber optic cables

Plants also rely on light to schedule their spring waking. Photoreceptors (protein molecules) on leaves and stems can detect the duration of daylight and darkness.

A remarkable recent discovery found that some plant stems act like fiber optic cables by guiding light underground to their roots so they can grow, according to a 2023 study published in Science Signaling. (Humans rely on fiber optic cables鈥攎ade from plastic or glass鈥攖o send data across the world at lightning speed through beams of light.)

About that whiplash weather

February 2024 is on record as the warmest ever recorded in Chicago and as the highest global average temperature in history for that month. At the Garden, it was in the 60s one day and snowing the next. It鈥檚 no wonder that buds started popping; some may regret it.

鈥淭he plants that placed their bets on a few unusually warm days may likely face harsh consequences like reproductive failure, loss of biomass, or even plant death,鈥 CaraDonna said. 鈥淐limate change is really shaking things up beyond the 鈥榬easonable conditions鈥 plants are used to such that they might start to get fooled.鈥

 


 

And They鈥檙e Off

These plants got a jump on spring 

Unseasonably warm days have coaxed snowdrops, winter aconites, and crocuses to bloom earlier than usual. It鈥檚 been so warm that 91短视频 staff opened some greenhouse roofs a month early to let the heat escape鈥攖he first time that鈥檚 ever happened in February, according to Tim Pollak, manager of plant production. 

Chicago鈥攁nd the world鈥攄ocumented its warmest ever February on record. Should we be concerned about the swelling buds on trees, flowers, and shrubs?

buds-syringa-bailbridget

Lilac (Syringa bailbridget) in the McCormick Entry Plaza

buds-rhododendron-cecile

Rhododendron (鈥楥ecile鈥) in the Landscape Garden

buds-viburnum-prunifolium

Viburnum (Viburnum prunifolium)

鈥淚t鈥檚 really weird and really early for this kind of weather. One day it was 65 degrees [Fahrenheit] and the next day it snowed,鈥 said Chris Henning, display garden manager. 鈥淏ut for a lot of early flowering plants like tulips and daffodils, it鈥檚 not really a big deal.鈥

Pollack said tulips and crabapple trees will bloom much earlier this year, so Garden visitors accustomed to visiting at a certain time in May or early June to see them might be surprised to find that they are done blooming. The crabapple flowers may also be damaged from late freezes when they finally open and that may affect the display, Pollack said.

The unusual heat teased maple trees to flower. Forsythias and lilacs may bloom earlier this year, too. That could be a problem when there鈥檚 a freeze鈥攕omething that can occur up to the week of April 22.

鈥淭here are lots of swelling buds right now. Lilacs were rather large. Maples were pretty much already starting to flower. Rhododendrons, viburnums, and witch hazels as well,鈥 Henning said. 鈥淢ost of the usual culprits, just really early this year."

Magnolias, too, are starting to drop their bud scales鈥攖hat protective fuzzy coating around the flowers, which could result in some damage to the petal tips when the flowers open, Henning said. 

For some tender plants, he said, 鈥淎 strong cold spell when the plant is leafing out could cause enough damage that it doesn鈥檛 recover.鈥

But this winter might be an outlier, he explained. 鈥淥ne year of extreme winter鈥攍ike the polar vortex鈥攊s not a big deal, but if it keeps happening it could have a long-term consequence, but I don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l see long-term repercussions this year. Most plants are resilient.鈥 

Stay tuned.

 

Carolyn Starks, Director, Content and Editorial

Nina Koziol is a garden writer and horticulturist who lives and gardens in Palos Park, Illinois.