Monitoring Phenological Changes Using Citizen Scientists. Julio Betancourt, PhD, Senior Scientist and Project Chief, National Research Program, Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, and Adjunct Professor, University of Arizona. Climate Change in National Parks Webinar Series, July 9, 2009.
Watching Nature's Clock: A Citizen-Scientist Effort to Track Seasonal Signs of Climate Change, Video of a presentation by Jake F. Weltzin as part of the USGS Public Lecture Series in Reston, VA. May 6th, 2009.
The USA National Phenology Network: Towards an Integrative Assessment of Global Change Impacts at the National Scale, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at the National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service STAR Seminar Series. December 2, 2008. Further information available here.
Taking the Biological Pulse of Our Planet, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at a public lecture in Menlo Park, CA. November 13, 2008. Video recording available here.
The USA National Phenology Network: Towards an Integrative Assessment of Global Change Impacts at the National Scale, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD. February 2008.
(Taking) The Pulse of Our Planet: The USA National Phenology Network, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, VA. February 2008.
Elevation and Latitudinal Gradient Sites: Detecting Phenology Controls and Climate Change Taking the Pulse of Our Planet, by Mark Losleben, Jake Weltzin, Ian Billick, and Daniel Jones. AGU Fall Meeting, December 2008.
Enhancing Ecological Thought Through Phenological Observation, Research, and Education: The National Phenology Network, by Jake F. Weltzin, Mark Losleben, and Lisa M. Benton. AGU Fall Meeting, December 2008.
The First Year of Progress and Future Directions of the USA-National Phenology Network, by Jake F. Weltzin and Mark Losleben. AGU Fall Meeting, December 2008.
A Plant Phenology Network for the Southeastern United States, by George R. Kish. Florida's Wildlife: On the Frontline of Climate Change, October 2008.
The USA National Phenology Network: Towards a Nation-Wide Phenology Camera Monitoring Network, by Lisa M. Benton, Jake F. Weltzin, Andrew D. Richardson, and Mark V. Losleben. ESA Annual Meeting, August 2008.
Global climate change and the importance of monitoring phenology in the southeastern United States (BIO-19), Abstract by G.R. Kish and M.V. Losleben. 72nd Annual Meeting of the Florida Academy of Sciences, Jacksonville, Florida. March 2008.
The USA National Phenology Network: Phenology as an Integrative Science for Assessment of Global Change Impacts, by Jake F. Weltzin and Mark Losleben. February 2008.
Wayne Esaias tracks honeybees in a changing climate, Earth and Sky Radio Series, EarthSky. June 29, 2009.
Wayne Esaias on honeybee behavior, An EarthSky Extended Podcast, EarthSky. June 29, 2009.
USF Eco Website, Interview of George Kish, Gulf Coast Live, WGCU Public Media. March 11, 2009.
Climate Scientists Enlist Citizen Volunteers, Interview of Jake Weltzin, NPR Talk of the Nation: Science Friday. March 6, 2009.
Help Us Keep an Eye on Climate Change (9.02 MB, mp3 format), Interview of Jake Weltzin, USGS CoreCast. March 2, 2009.
The Candidates & a New Green Economy, Interview of Jake Weltzin, EarthBeat Radio. September 30, 2008.
The Buzz on Pollinators: Podcasts Hover Around National Pollinator Week, USGS Newsroom. June 23-27, 2008. A direct link to the Pollinator Partnership's Podcasts can be found here.
The Pulse of our Planet: The USA National Phenology Network, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at the USGS Western Region Geography Science Center, Menlo Park, CA. April 21, 2008.
Blossoms Springing Forward Earlier, Too, Interview of Kirsten de Beurs (Coordinator of the Mid-Atlantic Phenology Network), NPR All Things Considered. March 21, 2008.
(Taking) The Pulse of our Planet: The USA National Phenology Network, Presentation by Jake F. Weltzin at The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, VA. February 2008.
Living on Earth: Project Budburst, Interview of Kay Havens (Chicago Botanic Garden) by Steve Curwood, Living on Earth. Week of February 15, 2008.