Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Island citizen scientists track impact of climate change on plants

Citizen ­scientists are observing and documenting how climate change is ­hitting Vancouver Island’s forests and plant species.
web1_lji-citizen-scientists
From left, Drew Dostaler, a summer student with the Mount Arrowsmith Biosphere Region Research Institute, and citizen scientists Judy Gibson, Ronda Murdock and Gary Murdock are observing and documenting how climate change is hitting Vancouver Island’s forests and plant species. HOPE LOMPE,CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER

Until about 10 years ago, when the large red chestnut tree outside Dorothee Kieser’s living room window flowered, it would be covered in beautiful yellow ­swallowtail butterflies.

But recently, Kieser has noticed how the tree has bloomed much earlier. Now, very few swallowtails are ready to come visit the tree — the cycles of the two are no longer in harmony.

Kieser, a retired Fisheries and Oceans ­Canada ­biologist and avid gardener, reflects on the ­disappearing butterflies as she describes how she came to be part of founding a group of citizen ­scientists observing and documenting how climate change is ­hitting Vancouver Island’s forests and plant species.

The data-collection project is now spread out across seven sites, with six active on Vancouver Island.

Led by Heather Klassen at the B.C. Ministry of ­Forests and Jessica Pyett of Mount Arrowsmith ­Biosphere Region Research Institute, part of VIU, the effort is now in its eighth year.

Once they reach a decade, the team will have ­meaningful long-term data to inform government ­agencies. “[We] always hear anecdotal remarks from people saying ‘Oh, my berries haven’t come out this year,’ or, ‘The birds are later to come,’ ” Pyett says.

“What we’re trying to do is really put concrete data behind those observations.”

Under the forested canopy of Qualicum Beach’s ­picturesque Milner Gardens and Woodlands, one such citizen scientist, Gary Murdock, is in his element.

He’s been part of the program for five years, and he knows the data-collection route and each of the plant specimens like the back of his hand.

Approaching vanilla leaf, oregon grape, huckleberry, Douglas fir and other native plants marked off with neon flagging tape along the route, Murdock knows exactly what to look for on each specimen, pointing out new needles, sprouts, cones and growth.

He reports his notes to institute summer student Drew Dostaler, who jots down the findings in a device that logs the information into the public database using a program called Nature’s Notebook.

Murdock’s wife, Ronda Murdock, is right alongside him, displaying equal knowledge on the route as the group, joined by recent addition Judy Gibson, presses forward around the roots and felled logs littering the path.

At the towering rough-barked Douglas fir, Gary pulls out his camera and points it skyward to the tree top, zooming in to get an estimation of cone clusters that have come in since the group last collected plant ­information in May. As he peers through his lens, Ronda chuckles as she remembers helping her husband collect pine cones in the early years of their marriage, at the start of what would be a 35-year-long career for Gary with the B.C. Forest Service.

The two ran ecotours on the Island for 20 years ­following his retirement. Over the years, they have ­gotten a sense of what impact climate change and drought is having on their natural surroundings. Gary notes cedar dying off because of a lack of water, and volatility in seed production.

For founder Kieser, she hopes that people will start paying more attention to what climate change is doing to the environment around them.

“I’m hoping that other gardeners — and not just ­gardeners but people in general — will just have a little bit of a closer look at what’s happening in their surroundings, and hopefully take in some of the ­consequences,” Kieser said.

“I think the public awareness is slowly but definitely increasing. That’s wonderful to see.”

Hope Lompe is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter with Canada’s National Observer. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.