Herbarium data accurately predict the timing and duration of
population-level flowering displays
Abstract
Forecasting the impacts of changing climate on the phenology of plant
populations is essential for anticipating and managing potential
ecological disruptions to biotic communities. Herbarium specimens enable
assessments of plant phenology across broad spatiotemporal scales.
However, specimens are collected opportunistically, and it is unclear
whether their collection dates—used as proxies of phenology—are
closest to the onset, peak, or termination of a phenophase, or whether
sampled individuals represent early, average, or late occurrences in
their populations. Despite this, no studies have assessed whether these
uncertainties limit the utility of herbarium specimens for estimating
the onset and termination of a phenophase. Using simulated data
mimicking such uncertainties, we evaluated the accuracy with which the
onset and termination of population-level phenological displays (in this
case, of flowering) can be predicted from natural-history collections
data (in the absence of other biases not evaluated here), and how
attributes of the flowering period of a species and temporal collection
biases influence model accuracy. Estimates of population-level onset and
termination were highly accurate for a wide range of simulated species’
attributes, but accuracy declined among species with longer
individual-level flowering duration and when there were temporal biases
in sample collection, as is common among the earliest and
latest-flowering species. The amount of data required to model
population-level phenological displays is not impractical to obtain;
model accuracy declined by less than 1 day as sample sizes rose from 300
to 1000 specimens. Our analyses of simulated data indicate that, absent
pervasive biases in collection and if the climate conditions that affect
phenological timing are correctly identified, then specimen data can
predict the onset, termination, and duration of a population’s flowering
period with similar accuracy to estimates of median flowering time that
are commonplace in the literature.