Specimens at Denver Botanic Gardens Document Climate Change
Denver Botanic Gardens and University of Denver (DU) are currently collaborating to conduct research that documents climate change effects on native flora in Colorado. We have been using preserved specimens from the Gardens Kathryn Kalmbach Herbarium and other regional herbaria to determine if flowering time has changed over the last 100 years. A preserved plant with reliable label data is proof positive that it existed in a specific place at a specific time in the state it is shown. Such specimens show that some Colorado species were blooming on average as much as three weeks later 100 years ago than today– a reflection of warming temperatures that are causing earlier springs.
Amelia Bowman, ‘09 University of Denver (DU) graduate, first discovered this trend investigating a set of six early blooming species that were collected in Colorado since the late 1800’s as a part of her Biology Honors thesis. These were species suggested by Gardens curator Dina Clark, as those that were likely to have flowering cued by temperature and or
moisture. Climate records show that both have increased in Colorado over the last 100 years. Although there is much year-to-year variability, there is a significant change overall, and it appears more dramatic here in Colorado than has been reported in places like Massachusetts.
This latter phase of the project is supported by a grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation in collaboration with The Nature Conservancy, and by a DU Helen Pustmueller fellowship. The findings will assist efforts to develop management plans for imperiled Colorado species in the context of climate change.
Whether a change in flowering time is “good” or “bad” depends on various factors, including behavior of pollinators. That some species can adapt to a changing environment can be good, however, if pollinators for a specific species are cued by day length (which hasn’t changed) while the flower is cued by temperature and moisture, there could be a disconnect that will harm both.
For more information about the Kathryn Kalmbach Herbarium, please see our website. For those interested in climate change and phenology, please check out the National Phenological Network and their citizen scientist program.


July 27, 2010 at 5:23 pm
To Whom It May Concern:
I greatly enjoyed the Henry Moore show and the environs in which it existed.
One question about the Prairie area and all the native grasses there: I have heard that grasses need animals to graze them in order to stay healthy–what do you do as a substitute for the buffalo or cows? Do you ever use what the native Americans used to enrich native grasses, fire?
Wayne
July 13, 2011 at 7:27 pm
I just recently visited Denver & was shocked by all the Roses growing everywhere. I always thought roses were so temperamental to grow. Could you explain why they seem to grow freely in Denver? Thanks