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Maryland


Wayne Esaias is a NASA scientist. He's been using satellite data to track plant and pollinator relationships across the United States. Bees are a common type of pollinator, and Esaias is also a beekeeper. [---1---]

Wayne Esaias: [---2---]

[---3---]

Wayne Esaias: The numbers of species involved and variability across the country means that this is a very difficult area to study, and that's where the satellite comes in.

In his job for NASA, Esaias is familiar with using satellite tracking tools to monitor ground vegetation across the globe. [---4---]

Wayne Esaias: [---5---] If they get out of sync – terribly out of sync - we lose both the plant and the pollinator.

Our thanks today to NASA's TERRA mission, helping us better understand and protect our home planet.

ES, a clear voice for science. We’re at Es. Org.

【視聽(tīng)版科學(xué)小組榮譽(yù)出品】
He got the idea for his project after discovering that the bees he keeps in Maryland were making honey earlier and earlier in the year. The nectar flows were coming about a half a day earlier per year. Esais was curious about whether plants and pollinators in other areas of the U.S. were shifting their behavior in a similar way, in response to warming winters caused by climate change. Now he plans to integrate satellite data with records kept by beekeepers. And that gives us the type of generalization that we need in order to perhaps better understand the impact of climate change and land cover change on the status of our pollinators.