Life of Corn

The following activity can be used as an introduction to the concept of phenology. It demonstrates the life cycle of a corn plant, a
plant familiar to many, putting this plant into a new perspective. The Life of Corn highlights the importance of the developmental lifecycle, something which all organisms experience in a predictable manner.


Flight of the Pollinators

This activity is designed to help participants experience the importance of plant phenology from a pollinator’s perspective. Participants learn why pollinators visit flowers and what color, shape, and size of flowers their pollinator prefers to visit.


Phenology Bingo

The following activity can be used as an introduction to the concept of phenology. The items on the phenology board are phenomena that participants have observed in nature, perhaps without even knowing their relationship to ecology, science, and climate, or their status as phenological events.


Observing Bird Behaviors

The following activity is an introductory lesson in the basics of observation skills for young children. Students will construct a bird feeder
using basic materials, hang their feeders at a safe outdoor location, and observe the behaviors of the birds who visit.


Explore Phenology with Seed Balls

The following activity is an introductory lesson in the basics of observation skills for young children. In this activity, students will use their senses to observe different plants. Then, they will make seed balls out of clay that can be planted at your school or brought home.


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30 million phenology records collected by Nature's Notebook observers

Tue, Aug 09, 2022

This week, we reached a significant new milestone - thirty million phenology records submitted to the National Phenology Database! The 30 millionth record was collected via Nature’s Notebook, the USA-NPN’s plant and animal phenology data collection platform, by Nika Gonzaga, a freshman in Desert View High School's Honors Biology Program in Tucson, Arizona. Nika observed young leaves on a desert willow tree. Nika said "as a freshman, this is my first time ever gathering research like this. It was enjoyable and a very simple task. I hope to do more research on other plants."