## Abstract The Report is again based on over 15,000 individual events, although Tables VII (Tree Records) and XIV (Hevingham Records) are wanting. But we have the cheering news that the latter, going back to 1736, will reappear with the records for 1932 and 1933, thanks to the Rev. A. F. Marsham,
Report on the phenological observations in the british isles from december, 1930, to november, 1931. no. 41
β Scribed by J. Edmund Clark; Ivan D. Margary; Richard Marshall; C. J. P. Cave
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 266 KB
- Volume
- 59
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0035-9009
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
1931 was officially described as βwet and dull,β the emphasis is on the latter; yet it was the tenth successive year with excess of rain, the total being that of eleven average years. A new table gives for each of the thirteen districts the number of weeks showing βdecidedβ and βexcessiveβ divergences from the averages for temperature, rainfall and sunshine. Out of the 572 events thus possible for sunshine during the spring and summer months there were only five decidedly bright against 72 dull. December, 1930, and November, 1931 alone were much on the warm side; March and September were cold. There were no records of βexcessiveβ warmth in spring and summer, but 12 of βcold.β Such short cold spells in spring threw the flower records back half a week, and although migrants reached our coasts to date, their progress inland was belated. Fig. 4, with its areas of earliness and lateness in flowering, shows only small and scattered cases of the formerβ covering but oneβtenth of our islands. Nearly half lay in northwest Ireland, with four days early, whilst Dartmoor fell 20 days behind its natural lateness. Slugs and weeds, as might be expected, caused exceptional trouble. Fig. 6a, showing the average advance of migrant arrivals for 16 years, adds to the value of the associated tables.
Thanks to a second broadcast in March, 1931, the corps of observers slightly exceeded 600. More would be specially welcome in west Ireland and north Scotland. The tables are based on more than 17,000 records.
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